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-tT'
J
^ttMit gnniments ai SStassacfctrsetts :
BVING THS
ANNUAL REPORTS
or YABIOUB
Public Opficers and Institutions
FOB THS TXAB
1894
1*UBIJ8BEI> BY THE SECRBTARY OF THE COM ICON WEALTH.
Vol. II.
BOSTON :
WRIOHX A POTTER PRINTING CO.. STATE PRINTERS,
18 Post Office Square.
1895.
•WVERSITY OF CHICAGO
LIBRARIES
266892
MARCH I930
PUBLIC DOCUMENTS
FOR THE YEAR 1894.
YOL. I.
Report of Secretary of the Commonwealth,
Report of Treasurer and Receiver General,
Report of Auditor of Accoants, .
Report of Attorney-General,
Report of Commissioner of Public Records,
Doc. No.
46
5
6
12
52
YoL. n.
Report of Tax Commissioner, 16
Aggregates of Polls, Property and Taxes, . • . .19
Abstract of Returns of Corporations, 10
Report of Commissioner of Foreign Mortgage Corporations, 42
Report of State Board of Arbitration and Conciliation, . 40
Report of Massachusetts Board of World's Fair Managers.
YoL. III.
Report of State Board of Lunacy and Charity, . . .17
Report of Trustees of the State Primary and Reform Schools, 18
Report of Trustees of the Danvers Lunatic Hospital, . . 20
Report of Trustees of the Northampton Lunatic Hospital, . 21
Report of Trustees of the Taunton Lunatic Hospital, . . 22
6
Doc No.
Report of Trustees of the Worcester Lunatic Hospital, . 23
Report of Trustees of the State Farm at Bridgewater, . 24
Report of Trustees of the State Almshouse at Tewksbury, . 26
Report of Trustees of the Perkins Institution and Massachu-
setts School for the Blind, 27
Report of Trustees of the Massachusetts School for the
Feeble-minded, 28
Report of Trustees of the Westborough Insane Hospital, . 30
Report of Trustees of the Massachusetts Hospital for Dipso-
maniacs and Inebriates, 47
Vol. IV.
Report of State Board of Health, 34
Report of Board of Metropolitan Sewerage Commissioners, 45
Report of Board of Registration in Medicine, ... 56
Vol. V.
Report of Railroad Commissioners and Returns of Railroad
Corporations, 14
Vol. VI.
Report of Commissioners of Savings Banks (Part I. — Sav-
ings Banks, Institutions for Savings, Safe Deposit, Loan
and Trust Companies. Part II. — Co-operative Banks,
Collateral Loan Companies, Mortgage Loan and Invest-
ment Companies) , 8
Vol. VII.
Re|)ort of Insurance Commissioner (Part I. — Fire and
Marine. Part II. — Life, Casualty and Assessment) ,
Vol. VIII.
Report of Board of Education, .
Report of Librarian of the State Library, .
Report of Free Public Library Commission,
I>oc. Ho,
2
3
44
Vol. IX.
Report of Secretary of the Board of Agriculture,
Report of Board of Control of the State Agricultural P^xperi-
ment Station,
Report of the Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Report of Board of Cattle Commissioners, ....
33
31
51
Vol. X.
Report of Adjutant General,
Report of Chief of the District Police,
Report of Board of Police for City of Boston,
Report of Commissioners of Prisons, .
Report of General Superintendent of Prisons,
7
32
49
13
41
Vol. XI.
Report of Registration of Births, Marriages and Deaths,
with Statistics of Divorce, and of Deaths investigated by
the Medical Examiner,
Report of Bureaa of Statistics of Labor, ....
Statistics of Manufactures,
1
15
36
Vol. XII.
Report of Board of Gas and £lectric Light Commissioners, . 35
Report of Inspector of Gas Meters and Illuminating Gas, . 55
Rep<vt of Contested Elections (no report in 1894), . . 37
Doc. No.
Number of Assessed Polls, Registered Voters, etc., . . 43
Repoi*t of Commissioners on Inland Fisheries and Game, . 25
Report of Controller of County Accounts, etc., ... 29
Report of Board of Harbor and Land Commissioners, . 11
Report of Board of Metropolitan Park Commissioners, .« 48
Report of Massachusetts Board of Registration in Dentistry, 38
Report of Massachusetts Board of Registration in Pharmacy, 39
Report of Commissioners on Topographical Survey, . . 50
Report of Civil Service Commissioners, • ... 53
Report of Massachusetts Highway Commission, ... 54
PUBLIC DOCUMENT .... .... No. 16.
REPORT
OF THB
TAX COMMISSIONER
OF THB
FOR THB TBAR BNDINO
December 31, 1894.
BOSTON :
WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO.. STATE PRINTERS,
18 Post Office Square.
1895.
ConTnTonfotallfe ai Passac^ustlts.
Office of the Secbbta&y,
Boston, Jan. 18, 1895.
Hon. Geo&ge v. L. Meter,
Speaker of the House of SepresenteUives,
SiK : — I have the honor to transmit herewith, for the use of
the Legislature, the report of the Tax Commissioner for the
year ending Dec. 31, 1894.
Very respectfully,
WxM. M. OLIN,
Secretary,
<^ammaniamli\i of Plassat^xtsetts.
Tax Commissioner's Dbpaktmrnt,
BosTOX, Jan. IS, 1895.
To the HonorcUfle Senate and House of Representatives.
The Tax Commissioner and Commissioner of Corporations
herewith sabmits to the Legislature his report of the proceed-
ings of the department for the year ending Dec. 31, 18114.
The following tables exhibit a suoimary statement of results
of the Corporation Tax Law for the current year : —
WhoU Amount of Taxes assessed under Chapter 13 , Public Statutes.
General list, #3,423,137 74
On Coal Mining, Quarrying and Oil Companies : —
May assessments, f 1,967 62
November assessments, 1,897 44
3,865 06
Foreign Railway Taxes : —
Maj assessments, $26,749 00
November assessments, 26,749 00
53,498 00
^ggi^gate of assessments, $8,480,500 80
Taxes of 1894, paid to January, 1895 : — i
General list, f 3,303.589 52 j
Under section 43, chapter 13, Pub. Stat., . . 3,523 42
Railvray taxes, 29,373 00
$3,386,485 94 |
Taxes of 1894, an paid : —
General list, $118,549 22
Abatements, 999 00
Mining taxes 341 64
Railiraj taxes, 24,125 00
144,014 86
$3,480,500 80
6 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
The following statement exhibits the outstanding taxes of
corporations in the general list, unpaid at the end of last year,
and the changes during the year : —
Taxes of 1887 : —
Outstanding Dec. 81, 1898, .... $1,310 22
Abated, 286 14
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1894, .... f 1,024 08
Taxes of 1888 : —
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1893, .... t2,082 97
Abated, 367 00
Outstanding Dec. 81, 1894, .... 1,716 97
Taxes of 1889 : —
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1893, .... f 8,155 62
Abated, . , 1,197 48
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1894, .... 6,958 14
Taxes of 1890: —
Outstanding Dec. 31,1893, .... |2,289 88
Abated, 1,855 00
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1894, .... 43488
Taxes of 1891: —
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1893, .... $3,597 10
Abated, 2,689 76
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1894, .... 907 34
Taxes of 1892 : —
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1893, .... $7,340 75
Paid 881 03
Abated 4,360 90
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1894, .... 2,098 82
Taxes of 1893 : —
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1893, .... $58,638 05
Paid, 49,441 66
Abated ; . . . 3,606 22
Outstanding Dec. 31, 1894, .... 5,590 17
Taxes of 1894 : —
Outetanding Dec. 31, 1894, 39,773 88
Aggregate of unpaid taxes, f 58,502 78
1895] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 7
The amount accruing to the Commonwealth under the opera-
tion of the law for the current year is as follows : —
From General List Corporations : —
Net araonnt assessed, $3,422,137 74
AmoQDt due to cities and towns, 2,515,558 57
Balance accruing to the Comroonwealth f 906,579 17
From corporations, under sections 43 and 46, . . . 57,363 06
Total amount accruing to the Commonwealth, . . $963,942 23
Of the amount of tax assessed the present year the sum of
$2«515,558.57 has been paid, and will be payable under the
terms of the law, to various cities and towns of the Common-
wealth.
A table is appended, marked C, giving the amounts dis-
tributed to each city or town. As usual, a distribution was
made on the first day of December, and certified in season to
be offset against the amount due from the cities and towns, on
account of the State tax, on the tenth day of December.
The amount collected at that date was f 3,303,589 52
The amount distributed was . ■ 2,423,349 27
The amount retained was $880,240 25
The comparative valuation of the capital stock and real
estate of the corporations during the years 1893 and 1894 is as
follows : —
The total valuation of the capital stock of corporations : —
In 1894, $521,721,533 00
1893, 523,755,591 00
Excess of 1893, $2,034,058 00
The valuation of real estate and machinery : —
In 1894, $315,026,068 00
1893, 311,548,290 00
Excess of 1894, . $3,477,768 00
8 TAX COMmSSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
The aggregate excess on which a tax was laid : —
In 1894, 1231,230,033 00
1893, 243,582,089 00
Excess of 1893, f 12,352,056 00
The whole amount realized by the Commonwealth during
the financial year ending Dec. 31, 1894, has been : —
From taxes of 1894 : —
General list distributed, $880,311 14
not distributed, 21,387 58
Mining list, 3,523 42
Eailway taxes, 29,373 00
•934,595 14
Taxes of previous years, collected in 1894 : —
General list, $6,797 79
Mining list and railway taxes, 24,554 23
Total amount realized, $965,947 16
Whole amount paid by coal mining, quarrying and oil com-
panies during the year ending Dec. 31, 1894, is as follows : —
Taxes of 1893 and previous years, $429 23
Taxes of 1894 8,523 42
Railway taxes of 1891 and previous years, .... 53,498 00
Aggregate of collections in 1894, $57,450 65
Whole amount of mining and foreign railway taxes assessed
in 1894: —
Taxes paid, $32,896 42
unpaid Jan. 1, 1895, 24,466 64
Total assessments $57,363 06
The following table shows the annual average rate of taxa-
tion upon which business corporations have been taxed for the
years 1864, to 1895, inclusive : —
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
9
TSAB.
Rate per H.
Tkab.
Rate per M.
1864, ....
tie 66
1880, ....
tl5 35
1865,
17 66
1881, ,
14 78
1866,
14 83
1882, .
15 28
1867, ,
16 67
1888, ,
14 98
1868,
18 12
1884, ,
15 95
1869,
15 62
1885, .
14 14
1870, ,
15 44
1886, .
14 48
1871,
14 84
1887, ,
15 06
1872, .
14 63
1888,
14 68
1873, .
14 49
1889, .
14 72
1874, .
15 51
1890,
14 84
1876,
14 68
1891,
14 50
1876, .
12 80
1892,
14 88
1877,
12 84
1893,
15 30
1878, ,
12 64
1894,
14 80
1879, .
12 78
The whole number of Massachusetts corporations and char-
ters to which nay attention has been directed the present year
is 2,849.
Of this number, 181 have been dissolved by the Legislature ;
22 have been dissolved by the courts ; 8 have been sold or con-
solidated and 261 are new corporations which have been char-
tered or organized ; leaving as the number of corporations and
charters to be reported Dec. 31, 1894, 2,638.
The authorized net increase of capital in the State during
the year is as follows : —
CorporatioDS authorized by special act, .... f 38,480,000 00
Under chapter 1 10, Public Statutes, 5,500 00
Under chapter 112, Public Statutes, 5,020,000 00
Under chapter 113, Public Statutes 862,000 00
Under chapter 106, section 21, Public Statutes, . 9,250,000 00
Certificate of increase of capital by 46 companies : —
Under section 56, chapter 106, Public Statutes, . . 7,778,525 00
•61,396,025 00
Certificate of reduction of capital by 19 companies : —
Under section 67, chapter 106, Public
Statutes, 11,986,050 00
I>i86olatioos by the Supreme Judicial
Court, 1,624,500 00
3,510,550 00
Net increase of capital, 157,885,475 00
10 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
The Board of Appeal was constituted by the appointment of
the Hon. Luman T. Jefts of the Council to serve with the
Treasurer and Auditor.
The Board organized May 10 by the choice of Hon. Henry
M. Phillips as chairman, when the first session was held.
Since that time, sixty-eight appeals by corporations have
been heard, with the result indicated in table B.
There have also been many appeals by cities and towns as
to the distribution of corporation taxes, which have been heard
and determined by the Board.
Taxation of Bank Shares.
Whole amount of tax on bank shares assessed, . . . f 1,58 1,798 90
Of which there was retained bv towns on ac-
count of shares owned by residents, . . 1560,582 06
And there was due and paid into the treasury, 1,021,216 84
$1,581,798 90
There was paid into and due to the treasury on account of
tax of 1894 $1,021,216 84
There was certified due to cities and towns
on account of tax of 1894 on bank shares,
owned by residents, $375,678 32
There will be due to savings institutions, . 145,296 03
Insurance companies, 32,050 42
Literary, scientific and charitable societies, . 33,263 35
Accruing to the Commonwealth, . • . 434,928 72
$1,021,216 84
Table D, annexed, shows the net amount of bank taxes
distributed to each city and town. Those amounts will be
somewhat modified by the final adjustment of disputed
claims.
Table E shows the amount collected in each city or town
having a bank, on account of shares held out of such place.
Both these tables exhibit the amounts as determined upon
the evidence furnished by the returns as received at first,
and are to be modified somewhat by the corrections estab-
lished by evidence subsequently produced before the Board
of Appeal.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 11
Savings Bank Tax.
[Pnb. Stat., chap. 18, sect. 20.]
Under this law there has been assessed daring the year : —
May assessments, f 56 1,273 30
November assessments, . • 576,40S 56
Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company : —
May assessments, 24,329 7S
November assessments, ........ 24,845 03
Total assessments, $1,186,356 67
Insurance Pkemitjm Tax.
[Pub. Stat., chap. 13 ; 1887, chap. 283, and 1890, chap. 197.]
Under these laws there has been assessed during the year : —
On account of tax of 1894, .... $243,998 71
tax of 1893 655 46
Total assessments, • $244,654 17
The collections have been : —
On account of tax of 1894, .... f 243,934 08
tax of 1893, .... 5,809 07
Total collections * . • . $249,743 15
The amount unpaid Jan. 1, 1895, was : —
On account of tax of 1894, $64 63
tax of 1893, 883 62
Ux of 1892, 349 53
Total unpaid, $1,297 78
Lite Insurance Excise.
[Pub. Stat., chap. 13.]
Under this law there has been assessed during the year, • $151,796 71
The collections have been : —
On account of tax of 1894, $151,796 71
The amount unpaid Jan. 1, 1895, was : —
On account of tax of 1880, $2,150 73
Tota] unpaid, $2,150 73
Special License Insurance Tax.
[Acts of 1887, chap. 214, sect. 83 ]
Under this law there has been assessed during the year, • $7,029 84
Total collections, $7,029 84
12 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
General Corporation Law.
During the year the commissioner has examined 3,087 cer-
tifieateS) of which 405 required a re-examination after errors
had been corrected, and 21 were examined three times, and 2
four times.
Six hundred and eleven of these were certificates of organ-
ization (including 102 examined twice, 4 three times, and 1
four times), of which 454 had their certificates finally approved.
One abandoned its organization.
Forty-one have been refused approval upon legal grounds,
leaving nine which have not yet presented their papers for re-
examination and approval.
Six disapproved in 1893 have been approved.
The whole number of certificates presented and examined,
including those presented as substitutes for certificates disap-
proved, is as follows : —
Public Statutes, chapter 40, section 16, 1
chapter lOp, section 21, 288
section 22, 1
se^jtion 46, 218
section 54, 2,161
section 56, 51
section 57, 23
section 79, 2
section 80, 1
chapter 115, section 4, 269
chapter 117, section 4, 3
Acts of 1887, chapter 404, 47
Acts of 1888, chapter 134, 3
Acts of 1891, chapter 247, and 1894, chapter 254, .... 2
Acts of 1892, chapter 28, 1
Acte of 1892, chapter 474, 1
Acts of 1894, chapter 79, 1
Acts of 1894, chapter 223, 1
Acts of 1894, chapter 289, 1
Acts of 1894, chapter 865, 1
Acts of 1894, chapter 880, section 1, 2
Acts of 1894, chapter 452, 3
Acts of 1894, chapter 472, 2
Acts of 1894, chapter 500 3
Acts of 1894, chapter 544, 1
Total, 8,087
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 13
Ninety-two corporations have completed their capital stock
by transfer of property, under section 48, chapter 106, Public
Statutes.
Under the legislation of 1894, the following companies have
been authorized to issue stock and bonds as follows : —
Barre Water Company. Authorized to issue stock to the
amount of $20,000, under Acts of 1894, chapter 365.
Lexington Water Company. Authorized to issue increased
capital to the amount of $30,000 (from $60,000 to $90,000), un-
der Acts of 1894, chapter 223. Stock to be offered at par ($50) .
Millbury Water Company. Authorized to issue stock to
the amount of $75,000 and bonds to the amount of $75,000,
under Acts of 1894, chapter 452.
Onset Water Company. Authorized to issue stock to the
amount of $15,000, bonds to the amount of $20,000, and in-
creased capital stock to the amount of $5,000, under the Acts
of 1894, chapter 452 and chapter 472. Increased stock to be
offered at par ($100).
Southbridge Water Supply Company, Authorized to issue
increased capital to the amount of $30,000 (from $40,000 to
$70,000), under Acts of 1894, chapter 289. Stock to be
offered at par ($50) .
Westhampton Water Company. Authorized to issue stock
to the amount of $1,500, under Acts of 1894, chapter 452, to
be issued at par ($25).
Westport Harbor Aqueduct Company. Authorized to issue
increased capital stock to the amount of $1,000 (from $3,000 to
$4,000), under Acts of 1894, chapter 472, to be offered at
par ($100).
Under chapter 544, Acts of 1894, on the petition of the Amer-
ican Bell Telephone Company, the commissioner determined the
value of shares to be offered to stockholders at $190 each.
Appended to Table A is a list of the names of eight corpo-
rations which have been authorized to change their names,
under provisions of chapter 360, Acts of 1891.
At the last three sessions of the Legislature 1,183 corpora-
tions were dissolved.
The following table shows the valuation of the various
descriptions of property and franchises from which the reve-
naes of the Commonwealth and the various municipalities are
derived and the amounts assessed thereon by taxation : —
14
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
YaloAtlon of Real
Yalaatlon of
Tax on
Tax on Per-
EsUte.
Penonal Estata.
Real EsUte.
sonal Estate.
Real estate by as-
sessors.
$1,898,855,000
—
$27,482,505
-
Peraonal estate by
assessors. .
—
$572,666,505
—
$8,088,319
Tax on polls by
assessors, .
—
—
—
1,343,769
Corporate taxable
excess,
-
231,230,038
—
3,423,187
KoD-resident bank
■
stock,
— ^
27,138,934
•
1,021,216
Saying bank de-
posits, taxable, .
-
227.586,371
—
1,137,680
Mass. Hospital Life
Ins. Company, .
-
9,734,963
—
48,674
Life insurance
values,
-
60,718,700
-
151,796
Insurance premi-
ums, .
~
16,187,698
-~
251,494
Foreign railways, .
—
53,498,000
-
53,498
Trust companies
deposits, .
—
1,380,155
—
20,362
Minino^ companies,
—
23,103,198
~
3,865
Gas and electric
light companies.
tax, .
—
—
->
12,238
Foreign Mortgage
Comrs. tax.
-
-
—
3,660
Railroad Commis-
•
sioners tax.
o
-.
~
24,614
Railroad inquest
lax, • • •
—
—
-
1,274
Inspector of Gas
Meters tax,
-~
mm
~.
3,973
Liquor licenses, .
—
—
—
544,292
Collateral legacies
and successions
tax, .
—
«M
239,368
Care and custody
of deposits.
-
-
—
1,800
f 1,898.855.000
$1,222,194,557
$27,482,505 116,375,028
Total assessments, $43,857,333.
Of the tax of $1,021,216 on non-resident bank stock, $434,-
928 accrues to the Commonwealth, and the balance is dis-
tributed to cities and towns, certain insurance companies,
charitable institutions and sayings banks, according to law.
Foreign Corporations.
By chapter 330 of the Acts of 1884, any foreign corporation
having a usual place of business in this Commonwealth is re-
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 15
quired to appoint the Commissioner of Corporations its attor-
ney, upon Tvhom all lawful processes in any action or proceed-
ing against it may be served ; and also to file with the commis-
sioner a copy of its charter or certificate of organization, and
a statement in regard to the amount and the payment of its
capital stock.
Two thousand seven hundred and nine complied with these
requirements, 235 having been filed the present year.
The total number of legal processes that have been served
upon the commissioner as attorney under the provisions of this
statute is 3,069.
Of this number 552 were served during the year.
By chapter 341, Acts of 1891^ foreign corporations, except-
ing railroad companies, mining and manufacturing companies
actually conducting their mining and manufacturing operations
wholly without the Commonwealth, and those foreign corpora-
tions which are required to make annual returns to other
officers of the Commonwealth, are required annually in the
month of March to file a certificate of condition in the office of
the secretary of the Commonwealth.
Six hundred and forty companies have complied with this
statute.
It is believed that nearly all which have retained a place of
business here, and are embraced within the terms of the statute,
have complied therewith.
MuKicarPAL Assets and Liabilities.
Skips and Vessels.
By the provisions of sections 8, 9 and 10 of chapter 11,
Public Statutes, ships and vessels engaged in the foreign carry-
ing trade, above the net yearly income, are exempt from taxa-
tion.
Table F shows the valuation of such property, as returned
to the assessors, to be $825,890.70; the net incoihe, $23,-
632.55; taxable loss, $802,258.15; and the amount refunded
to cities and towns, $10,967.25.
Table G contains tabulated results of returns received from
alJ the cities and towns in the State, in substantially the same
form as last year.
16
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Hampden has failed to make a return , although repeated re-
quests have been made.
The same form of statement has been continued, as it fur-
nishes opportunity for comparison with statements of previous
years, and because, on the whole, it exhibits fairly the finan-
cial condition of municipalities.
Table H has been prepared to show the percentage of debt
to valuation for purposes of local taxation, and a column has
been added to give sinking funds where they exist.
In calculating these percentages, trust funds have been
omitted from the amount of debts in those towns where there
is an asset of the same character to the amount of such asset.
For convenience of comparison, I have added to the tables a
statement (Table I) of the indebtedness of the several munici-
palities for the years 1872, 1875, 1878 and 1894. In this
table sinking funds and trust funds, to the extent of assets
held, have been deducted from the outstanding debt of each
municipality for all the years.
The year 1872 was the commencement of the present sys-
tem of reporting assets and liabilities.
Upon comparing the tables for the past two years, it appears
that 128 towns have diminished their net debt, 139 towns have
increased it and 19 towns have neither increased nor dimin-
ished .
Sixty-six towns which had no debt last year have no debt
this year; 71 towns have no debt this year, against 78 which
were in like situation last year.
The percentage of net debt has increased in 118 towns.
A synopsis of the aggregate valuation by the local assessors,
aggregate net debt of municipalities and percentage of same is
herewith given for the years 1871 to 1894, inclusive ; —
Ybar.
Aggregate Valnatlon.
Aggregate Net Debt.
Percentage.
1871, .
1872, .
1873,
1874,
1875, .
1876,
1877, .
• ■ «
■ • ■
1 • • «
• » • •
» • * •
* ■ ■ •
> « * •
11,497,361,686
1,696,699,969
1,763,429,990
1,831,601,165
1,840,792,728
1,769,359,431
1,668,226,792
$39,421,298
45,221,745
63,380,118
64,904,069
71,784,006
72,165,156
72,049,685
.026
,026
.030
.035
.038
.040
.043
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
17
Ybab.
Aggregate Valoatton.
Aggregate Net Debt.
Percentage.
1878,
1879,
1880,
1881,
1882,
1883,
1884,
1885,
1886,
1887,
1888,
1889,
1890,
1891,
1892,
1893,
1894,
11,568,988,210
1,529,521,014
1,584,756,802
1,648,239,976
1,684,218,428
1,781,297,061
1,766,879,778
1,782,349,143
1,847,581,422
1,932,548,807
1,992.804,101
2,072,170372
2,154,134,626
2,245.042,273
2,338,026,090
2,428,839,029
2,471,521,605
^8,864,685
67,728,557
68,512,929
66,408,691
62,782,507
63,413,128
63,595,568
68,306.213
63,586,220
64,675,061
65,586,603
66,602,030
70,742.786
73,066,660
76,483,323
80,125,662
87,786,918
.043
.044
.043
.039
.037
.036
.036
.036
.034
.033
.032
.032
.032
.032
.032
.032
.036
The gross interest-bearing debt of municipalities of the State
was $124,770,526 on the first day of May, 1894.
If we assume the rate of interest to average 4 per cent.,
which is a safe average, the amount raised by taxation for
interest alone, in 1894, was $4,990,821.
The aggregate net debt of the municipalities of the State
for 1893 was $80,125,652; and for 1894, $87,786,918; show-
ing an increase of $7,661,266.
The aggregate local assessment of taxes for State, town and
county purposes in 1894 was $36,914,205, as reported by the
secretary. Of this, $2,000,000 was State tax and $2,479,877
county tax, leaving $32,434,328 as the total local assessment
for municipal purposes ; being 87 per cent, of the aggregate tax.
The total amount of sinking funds reported last year was
$36,978,076; this year it is $32,463,184, a decrease of
$4,514,892.
The gross debt for water works is $44,438,614 ; the amount
of water sinking funds reported is $12,610,172, leaving $31,-
828,442 net water debt, or 36 per cent, of net indebtedness.
Chapter 133 of the Acts of the year 1882 provides that cities
and towns required to establish a sinking fund for the payment
of their indebtedness may, instead thereof, provide for the pay-
ment of such indebtedness in such annual proportional payments
as will extinguish the same within the time required by law.
18 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Many towns, doubtless, have heretofore pursued the policy
authorized by this act. Such returns as have been received
are given in Table H.
Steam Boilei'S.
Table K contains the result of returns under the require-
ments of Acts of 1873, chapter 321, tabulated as in previous
years.
Ipswich has failed to make return.
Hxernpted Propei^ty.
Table L contains a tabulated statement of the facts contained
in the returns received, in accordance with the requirements of
Acts of 1874, chapter 227.
Monroe has failed to comply with the law, although repeated
requests have been made. The importance of full and accurate
returns of this character is felt very seriously from their want
when examination is made into the effect of the tax laws. .
Property held for Lite^^ary^ Benevolent^ Charitable and
Scientific Purposes.
Abstracts of the returns received under the provisions of
chapter 217 of the Acts of the year 1882 will be found in
Table M, showing the aggregate value of real estate to be
$36,783,61i), and of personal estate, $35,951,739 ; total, $72,-
735,358 ; showing also the income of the several corporations
for the year ending May 1, 1894, $9,329,926, and the expen-
ditures, $9,149,066.
Respectfully submitted,
CHAS. ENDICOTT,
Tax Commissioner,
1895,] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16, 19
TABLE A.
Corporations Existing under Authoritt of this Commonwealth
December 31, 1894, and Subject to Taxation under Chap-
ter 13, Public Statutes.
A. B. Noyes & Co. Corporation, Georgetown. Organization
certified November 24, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. C. Dotton Lumber Company, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified November 10, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. C. Fairbanks Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
Joly 29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. D. Puffer and Sons Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organ-
ization certified October 23, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. F. Bemis Hat Company, Foxbovough. Organization certified
July 2, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. F. Leonard Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
December 27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. F. Towle & Son Company, Greenfield. Organization certified
December 5, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. H. Atwood Company, Boston. Organization certified March 10,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. JuB Johnson Company, Chelsea. Organization certified January
9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. M. Gardner Hardware Company, Boston. Organization certified
October 7, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. M. McPhail Piano Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 16, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. M. Niles Shoe Company, Brockton. Organization certified
August 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. M. Richards Building Moving Company, Boston. Organization
certified November 12, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. 8. Lowell Company, Worcester. Organization certified July 31,
1889. Pub. Stot., c. 106. ,
A. S. Beyers Shoe Company, Salem. Organization certified March
27, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
20 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
A. Storrs and Bement Company, Boston. Organization certified
Jane 7, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. T. Steams Lumber Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified February 28, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. W. Ciapp Company, Boston. Organization certified July 18,
1891. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
A. W. Eaton Paper Company, Lee. Organization certified January
24, 1898. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
A. W. Strauss Paint and Varnish Company, Boston. Organization
certified December 21, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Abbot Spinner Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
November 6, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Abbott Slipper Company, The, Lynn. Organization certified March
80, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Abbott's Menthol Piaster Company, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified January 31, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Abington Tack and Machine Association, Abington. Organization
certified June 1, 1876. 1870, c. 224.
Abram French Company, Boston. Organization certified February
24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Acushnet Co-operative Association, New Bedford. Organization cer-
tified November 9, 1867, under 1866, o. 290.
Acushnet Mills Corporation, New Bedford. Organization certified
December 22, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Adams & Odell Incorporated, Boston. Organization certified April
17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Adams Brothers Manufacturing Company, Adams. Organization
certified May 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Adams Drug Company, Boston. Organization certified October 6,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
'Adams Electric Light and Power Company, Adams. Organization
certified December 10, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Adams Gas Light Company, South Adams. Organization certified
November 13, 1860.
Adelphi Rink Corporation, New Bedford. Organization certified
December 15, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Advertiser Newspaper Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 30, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
JEtna Knitting Company, Worcester. Organization certified Febru-
ary 11, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
^tna Mills, Watertown. Chartered 1864, c. 33.
Agawam Company, lAgawam. Organization certified June 3, 1857.
Agawam Farm Company, Wareham. Organization certified October
28, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895-] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 21
Agawam Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified April 28, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Agawam Paper Company, West Springfield. Organization certified
June 14, 1859.
Albany Street Freight] Railway Company, Boston. Chartered 1868,
c. 97.
Albemarle Slate Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
Jane 3, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Albert Field Tack Company, Taunton. Chartered 1869, c. 376.
Albertson Marble Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
June 4, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Albion Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified December
20, 1869.
Alcazar Music Hall Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
October 5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Algonquin Printing Company, Fall River. Organization certified
June 24, 1891. Pub. Stot, c. 106.
Allen and Fndicott Building Company, The, Cambridge. Organ-
ization certified June 30, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Allen Fan Company, Braintree. Organization certified July 28,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Allen Gymnasium Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
June 28, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 115.
Allen Lane Company, Boston. Organization certified December 18,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Allerton Building Company, Marblehead. Chartered 1889, c. 2.
Alpha Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 19, 1894. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Alta Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
March 16, 1886. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Altamonte Springs Company, Boston. Chartered 1894, c. 79.
American Bedstead Company, The, Westborough. Organization
certified December 14, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Bell Telephone Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 17, 1880. ^ 1880, c. 117.
American Bolt Company, Lowell. Organization certified December
23, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
American Casket Hardware Company, The, Westfield. Organiza-
tion certified July 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Cigar Company, Westfield. Organization certified July
U, 1873.
American Citizen Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 15, 1888. Fub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
22 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
American Collection Agency, Boston. Organization certified Jane
16, 1886. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
American Confectionery Company, Boston. Organization certified
October 6, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Cultivator Publishing Company, Boston. Organization
certified January 29, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Dry Plate Company, The, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified October 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Fire Hose Manufacturing Company, Chelsea. Organiza-
tion certified November 30, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
American Grospel Publishing Society, The, Boston. Organization
certified April 5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Insurance Company, Boston. Chartered 1818, c. 15.
American Landlords' Liability Insurance Company, Boston. Char-
tered 1888, c. 205.
American Linen Company, Fall River. Chartered 1853, c. 92.
American Loan and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1881, c. 80.
American Mica Company, Boston. Organization certified July 28,
1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
American Net and Twine Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 13, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
American Optical Company, Southbridge. Organization certified
March 15, 1869. Reorganized February 15, 1871. 1870,
c. 224, § 12.
American Pad & Paper Company, The, Holyoke. Organization
certified February 27, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Paper Bag Company, Boston. Organization certified
August 12, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
American Powder Mills, The, Boston. Organization certified Sep-
tember 13, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Press Association of Massachusetts, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified November 12, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Printing Company, The, Fall River. Organization certi-
fied February 2, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
American Publishing Company, The, Lawrence. Organization cer-
tified June 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Rapid Telegraph Company of Massachusetts, Boston.
Organization certified December 16, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
American Rubber Company, Boston. Organization certified Julv 30,
1878. 1870, c. 224.
American Steam Gauge Company, Boston. Chartered 1854, c. 86.
American Telephone and Telegraph Company, New York.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16, 23
American Telephone and Telegraph Company of Massachusetts,
Boston. Organization certified September 20, 1886. Pub.
Stat., c. 106.
American Tool and Machine Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied October 4, 1864.
American Tube Works, Somerville. Organization certified April 29,
1852.
American Waltham Watch Company, Waltham. Chartered 1854, c.
123. 1885, c. 26.
American Watch Tool Company, Waltham. Organization certified
November 7, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
American Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified Jan-
uary 11, 1870, under Gen. Stat., c. 61.
Ames Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Chartered 1884, c. 31.
Ames Plow Company, Boston. Organization certified February 24,
1864.
Ames Sword Company, Boston. Organization certified May 14,
1881. 1870, c. 224.
Amesbnry and Salisbury Gas Company, Amesbury. Assessment
certified August 4, 1860.
Amesbnry Building Corporation, The, Amesbury. Organization
certified December 10, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Amesbury Carriage Company, The, Amesbury. Organization certi-
fied December 10, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Amesbury Electric Light, Heat & Power Company, Amesbury.
Organization certified May 28, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106;
1891, c. 360.
Amesbury Opera House Company, The, Amesbury. Organization
certified May 12, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Amesbury Shoe Company, The, Newburyport. Organization cer-
tified March 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
Amherst Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Amherst. Organ-
ization certified June 23, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Amherst Gas Company, The, Amherst. Organization certified Jan-
nary 17, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Amherst Water Company, Amherst. Chartered 1880, c. 179.
Andover Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Andover. Organi-
zation certified June 19, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Andover Electric Company, The, Andover. Organization certified
May 2, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Aodover Gas Light Company, Andover. Organization certified Sep-
tember 26, 1889. Pub. SUt., c. 106.
Andover Press (Limited), The, Andover. Organization certified
September 14, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
24 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Andover Review CompaDj, The, Andover. Organization certified
December 5, 1883. Fob. Stat., c. 106.
Angier Chemical Company, The, Newton. Organization certified
February 29, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Annawan Manufactory, Fall River. Chartered 1825.
Anthony and Cushman Tack Company, Taunton. Organization cer-
tified September 26, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Appleton Company, Lowell. Chartered 1828. 1827, c. 45.
Appleton Shoe Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
August 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Apsley Rubber Company, Hudson. Organization certified February
29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Archibald Wheel Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
December 27, 1871.
Arena Newspaper Company, Lowell. Organization certified July 24,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Arlington Co-operative Association, The, Lawrence. Organization
certified July 8, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Arlington Gas Light Company, Arlington. Chartered 1854, c. 207.
1867, c. 221.
Arlington Hotel Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
October 22, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Arlington Mills, Lawrence. Organization certified February 20,
1865. 1875, c. 1.
Arms Manufacturing Company, The, Deerfield. Organization certi-
fied May 21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Armstrong Transfer Express Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied October 26, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Arnold Print Works, Adams. Organization certified October 10,
1876.
Arthur C. Harvey Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
March 14, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Arthur C. King Company, Worcester. Organization certified July
7, 1898. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Arthur Treat Company, Boston. Organization certified March 14,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ashburnham Reservoir Company, Ashburnham. Chartered 1853, c.
268.
Ashby Reservoir Company, Ashby. Chartered 1869, c. 225.
Ashfield Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Ashfield. Organ-
ization certified November 5, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ashland Shoe <& Leather Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 25
AsBabei ManafactariDg Company, Sudbary and Boston. Organiza-
tion certified September 11, 1862.
Atherton Machine Company, Tewksbary. Organization certified
December 31, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
AHierton Paint Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
October 5, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Athol and Orange Street Railway Company. Organization certified
July 19, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 115.
Athol €ra8 and Electric Company, Athol. Organization certified
February 25, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Athol Machine Company, The, Athol. Organization certified Jun&
4, 1868.
Athol Water Company, Athol. Chartered 1877, c. 121.
Atkinson Coal Company, Newburyport. Organization certified April
16, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Atlantic Cotton Mills, Lawrence. Chartered 1846, c. 7.
Atlantic Glue Company, Lynn. Organization certified February 9»
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
Atlantic Lumber Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
November 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Atlantic News Company, Boston. Oiganization certified December
21, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Atlantic Novelty Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization
certified April 26, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Atlantic Telegraph Company of Massachusetts, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified December 28, 1885. Pub. Stet., c. 106.
Atlantic Wharf Company, Gloucester. Organization confirmed by
Acts of 1888, c. 140.
Atlantic Works, East Boston. Chartered 1853, c. 271.
Atlas Brokerage Company, The, Boston. Organization certified July
8, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Atlas Pulp Company, Springfield. Oiganization certified March 30,
1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Atlas Tack Corporation, Boston. Organization certified April 21,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Atdeborough Branch Railroad Company, Attleborough. Chartered
1870, c. 100.
Attleborough, North Attleborough and Wrentham Street Railway
Company, Attleborough. Organization certified June 24, 1889.
Pub. Stat., c. lis.
Attieboroagb Steam and Electric Company Attleborough. Organ-
ization certified October 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
26 TAX COMMISSIONERS REPORT. [Jan.
Aubarn Mills Company, Aubnrn. Organization certified June 30,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Anstin C. Wellington Coal Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 7, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Automatic Winder Company, Boston. Organization certified March
17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Avon Shoe Company, Avon. Organization certified November 22,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
B. F. Nichols Belting Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
January 13, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
B. F. Sturtevant Company, Boston. Organization certified May 29,
1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
B. H. Woodsum Company, Braintree. Organization certified Jan-
uary 23, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
B. L. Bragg Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
February 5, 1892. Pub. Stat., c 106.
B. M. C. Durfee Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Fall River.
Chartered 1887, c. 85.
B. W. Fellows Machine Company, Beverly. Organization certified
June 24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Babcock Varnish Company, The, Boston. Oi^anization certified
March 25, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bailey Weston Company, Boston. Organization certified September
5, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Baker and Gay Company, Beverly. Organization certified April 9,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Baker-Hunnewell Co., Cambridge. Organization certified May 2,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bakers and Confectioners Co-operative Association, The, Boston.
Organization certified February 27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Baker's Pond and Drain Fishing Company, (South) Yarmouth.
Chartered 1858, c. 65.
Baltimore and Ohio Telegraph Company. Boston. Organization cer-
tified June 25, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Banister Carley Company, The, Northampton. Organization certified
July 28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Banker and Tradesman Company, Boston. Organization certified
August 30, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bankers and Merchants Telegraph Company of Massachusetts, The,
Boston. Organization certified November 3, 1883. Pub. Stat.,
c. 106.
Barbour Stockwell Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
May 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16. 27
Bardwell, Anderson Company, Boston. Organization certified July
11, 1894. Pab. Stat, c. 106.
Bamaby Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organization certi-
fied April 22, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Barnard Manufaotoring Company, Fall River. Organization certi-
fied June 30, 1874.
Barnard Sumner & Putnam Company, Worcester. Organization
certified January 29, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Barre Hotel Company, The, Barre. Organization certified June 22,
1888. Pub. Stot, c. 106.
Barre Water Company, Barre. Chartered 1894, c. 865.
Battery Wharf Store Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 22, 1891. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Bay State Belting Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 26, 1884. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Bay State Biscuit Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
November 4, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Bay State Brick Company, Boston. Organization certified July 2,
1863. Reorganized May 12, 1871. 1870, c. 224, § 12.
Bay State Clothing Company, The, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied February 3, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bay State Coal Company, Worcester. Organization certified June
27, 1889. Pub. Stot, c. 106.
Bay Stote Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Amherst. Or-
ganization certified January 8, 1889. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Bay Stote Cordage Co., Newburyport. Organization certified De-
cember 1, 1892. Pub. Stot, c. 106.
Bay Stote Corset Company, Springfield. Organization certified July
19, 1890. Pub. Stot, c. 106.
Bay Stote Gas Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
December 2, 1884. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Bay Stote Gold Mining Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 14, 1867.
Bay Stote House, Proprietors of the, Worcester. Chartered 1853, c.
341. 1856,0.175.
Bay Stote Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified May 25,
1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Bay Stote Iron Company, Boston. Chartered 1850, c. 26.
Baj State Metal Works, Cambridge. Organization certified May 10,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bay State Bobber Company, Boston. Organization certified Feb-
maiy 27, 1894. Pub. iStat., c. 106.
28 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Bay State Security Company, Boston. Organization certified No-
vember 8, 1894. Pnb. Stat., c. 106.
Bay State Shoe and Leather Company, Worcester. Organization
certified May 8, 1866.
Bay State Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1887, c. 150.
Bay State Watch Case Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 6, 1885. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Bay State Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified Feb-
ruary 7, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bay State Worsted Company, The, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied March 80, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Beach and Clarridge Company, Boston. Organization certified June
9, 1898. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Beacon Cycle Manufacturing Company, Westborougb. Organization
certified March 23, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Beacon Oil Company, Boston. Organization certified January 9,
1880. 1870, c. 224.
Beacon Publishing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
February 5, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Beacon Shoe Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified January 31, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Beacon Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1892, c. 395.
Beals Leather Company, Boston. Organization certified September
27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Beattie Zinc Works Company, Reading. Organization certified Jan-
uary 12, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bed Rock Emery Wheel Company, Gloucester. Organization certi-
fied July 5, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bedford Lumber and Manufacturing Company, Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified May 21, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Beebe and Holbrook Company, The, Holyoke. Organization . certi-
fied January 26, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Belcher and Taylor Agricultural Tool Company, Chicopee. Organi-
zation certified November 25, 1864.
Belchertown Co-operative Creamery Association, Belchertown. Or-
ganization certified December 24, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Belding Company, Boston. Organization certified March 14, 1894.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bell Telephone Company, Boston. Organization certified July 30,
1878. 1870, c. 224.
Belmont Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organization certi-
fied December 22, 1893. Pub. Stat-, c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC document—No. le. 29
Belvidere Woollen Manafactaring Company, Lowell. Chartered
1884, c. 133.
BemiB and Call Hardware and Tool Company, Springfield. Organi-
zation certified Jane 5, 1855.
Bennett Manafactaring Corporation, The, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified March 7, 1889. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Bent Brothers Company, Wayland. Organization certified Febrnary
24, 1898. Pnb. Stat., c. 106.
Beoli Company, The, Fitchbarg. Organization certified Jaly 12,
1893. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Berkeley Hoaae Company, Boston. Chartered 1871, c. 19.
Berkshire Cotton Manafactaring Company, Adams. Organization
certified Augast 29, 1889. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Berkshire Coarier Company, Great Barrington. Organization certi-
fied Febrnary 24, 1891. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Berkshire Creamery Co-operative Association, Sandisfield. Organiza-
tion certified December 3, 1886. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Berkshire Electric Light, Heat & Power Co., The, Monterey. Organ-
ization certified December 12, 1893. Pab. Stot., c. 106.
Berkshire Glass Sand Company, The, Cheshire. Organization certi-
fied November 15, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Berinhire Hills Co-operative Creamery Association, Monterey. Or-
ganization certified March 1, 1887. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Berkshire Ore Company, Richmond. Organization certified Aagast
11, 1885. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Berkshire Overall Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified Jana-
aiy 4, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Berkshire Bailroad Company, Stockbridge. Chartered 1837, c. 162.
Berkshire Tack Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization certified
March 18, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Berkshire Water Company, Lee. Chartered 1880, c. 127. 1881,
c. 81.
Berkshire Woolen Company, Great Barrington. Chartered 1836,
c. 54.
Berlin Falls Fibre Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
Jane 16, 1893. Pab. Stot., c. 106.
Beverly and Danvers Street Railway Company, Beverly. Organiza-
tion certified May 27, 1889. Pab. Stot., c. 113.
Beverly BoUding Association, The, Beverly. Organization certified
Jaly 16, 1889. Pab. Stot., c. 106.
Bererly Co-operative Association, Beverly. Organization certified
March 5, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Beverly Gas and Electric Company, Beverly. Organization certified
Jane 15, 1859. 1891, c. 360.
30 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Beverly Marine Railway, Beverly. Chartered 1858, c. 37. 1892,
0. 205.
Bigelow and Dowse Company, Boston. Organization certified Jan*
nary 11, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bigelow Carpet Company, Clinton. Chartered 1854, c. 89.
Bigelow Lithographic Company, Springfield. Organization certified
August 13, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Black Rock Hotel Company, Cohasset. Organization certified Octo-
ber 21, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Blackstone Valley Co-operative Creamery Company, Uxbridge. Or-
ganization certified November 6, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Blackstone Water Company, Blackstone. Chartered 1894, c. 362.
Blair Camera Company, Boston. Organization certified January 5,.
1882. 1886, c. 43.
Blair Manufacturing Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified July 23, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Blake Manufacturing Company, Springfleld. Organization certified
February 10, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Blanchard & Watts Engraving Company, The, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified May 21, 1894. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Bleak House Association, Dennis. Organization certified November
1, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Blue Hill Electric Company, The, Canton. Organization certified
August 30, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boott Cotton Mills, Lowell. Chartered 1835, c. 74.
Border City Hotel Company, Fall River. Organization certified
April 14, 1888. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Border City Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organization
certified February 28, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Advertising Company, Boston. Organization certified July
16, 1888. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Boston and Albany Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1867,
c. 270. 1869, c. 461.
Boston and Bangor Steamship Company, Boston. Organization
certified July 6, 1875. 1882, c. 13.
Boston and Chelsea Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1854,^
c. 445.
Boston and Gloucester Steamboat Company, The, Boston. Organ-
ization certified April 2, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston and Lowell Bicycle Railway Company. Chartered 1894,
c. 550.
Boston and Lowell Railroad Corporation, Boston. Chartered 1830,
c. 4. 1881, c. 98.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 31
BoBton and Machias Steamship Company, Boston. Organization
certified June 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston and Maine Railroad, Boston. Cliartered 1833, o. 109 ; 1837,
c. 113 ; 1839, c. 82 ; 1841, c. 56 ; 1843, c. 90.
Boston and Philadelphia Steamship Company, Boston. Chartered
1873, c. 46.
Boston and Providence Railroad Corporation, Boston. Chartered
1831, c. 56.
Boston and Provincetown Steamship Company, The, Boston. Or-
ganization certified May 3, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston and Revere Electric Street Railway Company, Revere. Or-
ganization certified May 16, 1888. 1889, c. 363.
Boston and Rozbury Mill Corporation, The, Boston. Chartered
1814, c. 39.
Boston Art Company, Boston. Organization certified November 2,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Bank Note and Lithographing Company, Boston. Organ-
ization certified May 6, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Base Ball Association, Boston. Chartered 1871, c. 131.
Boston Beer Company, Boston. Chartered 1828. 1827, c. 32.
Boston Belting Company, Boston. Chartered 1845, c. 177. 1847,
c. 96.
Boston Blower Company, The, Boston. Organization certified June
1, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Book Binding and Stationery Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified September 6, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Book Company, The, Boston. Organization certified June
3, 1889. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
Boston Cab Company, Boston. Organization certified February 2,
1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Can Company, Boston. Organization certified February 27,
1866.
Boston Casting Company, Boston. Organization certified February
28, 1894. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Boston Chair Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied December 4, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
•
Boston Clock Company, Boston. Organization certified November
20, 1880. 1884, c. 300.
Boiton Coal Company, Boston. Organization certified January 22,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Coffer Dam Company, Boston. Organization certified May
28, 1864. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
32 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan,
Boston Cold Storage and Freezing Company, Boston. Organization
certified May 5, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Co-operative Building Company, Boston. Chartered 1871, c.
324. 1872, c. 184.
Boston Co-operative Flower Growers Association, The, Boston.
Organization certified November 22, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Cordage Company, Boston. Organization certified July 13,
1880. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Counter Company, Boston. Organization certified September
24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Cydorama Company, Boston. Organization certified June
12, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Dental Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization
certified April 20, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Dry Goods Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 18, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Duck Company, Palmer and Belchertown. Chartered 1845,
C.47.
Boston Electric Company, Boston. Organization certified July 31,
1879. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Electric Light Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 14, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Electric Protective Association, Boston. Organization certi-
fied April 29, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Elevated Railway Company, Boston. Chartered 1894, c. 548.r
Boston Enterprise Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organ-
ization certified June 20, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Excursion Steamship Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 13, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Fire Brick and Clay Retort Manufacturing Company, Boston.
Organization certified January 26, 1864.
Boston Flint Paper Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 26, 1882. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Forge Company, Boston. Organization certified March 28,
1867.
Boston Fresh Tripe Company, Boston. Organization certified July
3, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Fruit Company, Boston. Organization certified September
30, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Furnace Company, Boston. Organization certified May 9,
1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Furniture Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
March 30, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 33
Boston Gas liight Company, Boston. Chartered 1823. 1822, c. 41.
Boston Gore and Web Manufactaring Company, Chelsea. Organ-
ization certiOed November 16, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Heating Company, Boston. Organization certified December
23, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Herald Company, The, Boston. Organization certified April
30, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Ice Company, The, Boston. Organization certified April 13,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Incandescent Lamp Company, The, Boston. Oi^anization
certified March 26, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Journal of Commerce Publishing Company, Boston. Organ-
ization certified September 26, 1872.
Boston Last Manufacturing Company, Maiden. Organization certi-
fied January 7, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Lead Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified July 19, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Lighterage & Towing Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified August 15, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Limited Pai-tnership Company, Boston. Chartered 1885,
e. 208.
Boston Lunch Company, Boston. Organization certified November
16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Chartered 1813.
1812, c. 92.
Boston Marble and Granite Company, The, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified March 2, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Marine Insurance Company, Boston. Organized December
23, 1873, under 1872, c. 375.
Boston Mining and Stock Exchange, Boston. Organization certified
October 16, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Mirror Company, Boston. Organization certified January 11,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Multiplex Telegraph Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified February 1, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Music Hall Association, Boston. Chartered 1851, c. 124.
1871, c. 2.
Boston Oregon Mast Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 19, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Parcel Delivery Company, Boston. Organization certified
May .5, 1887. Pub. Stat^ c. 106.
Boston Pier, or the Long Wharf, Proprietors of, Boston. Chartered
1772. 1871, c. 136.
34 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Boston Plate and Window Glass Company, Boston. Organization
certified January 11, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Power Company, Boston. Organization certified May 2,
1893. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
Boston Real Estate Association of Boston, Boston. Chartered 1888,
c. 126.
Boston Regalia Company, The, Boston. Organization certified July
9, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn Railroad Company, Boston. Or-
ganized May 23, 1874. 1872, c. 53.
Boston Rubber Company, Boston. Organization certified August
29, 1878. 1870, «. 224.
Boston Rubber Shoe Company, Maiden. Chartered 1853, c. 277.
1855, c. 367.
Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1867,
c. 151. 1874, c. 373 ; 1875, c. 123.
Boston School Supply Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Security Company, Boston. Organization certified Septem-
ber 24, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Spar Company, The, Boston. Organization certified July
80, 1888. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Boston Specialty and Toy Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 20, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Steam Fishing Co., Boston. Organization certified April 11,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Stereotype Foundry, Boston. Chartered 1850, c. 119.
Boston Storage Warehouse Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified April 15, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Terra Cotta Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 7, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Boston Theatre, The Proprietors of the, Boston. Chartered 1858,
c. 79.
Boston Thread and Twine Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 23, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Times Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Sep-
tember 28, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Tow Boat Company, Boston. Chartered 1873, c. 27.
Boston Trading and Export Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified May 7, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Transcript Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 19, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
1895,] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16. 35
BoBton Transfer Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
March 30, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Veterinary Hospital, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 7, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Boston Water Power Company, Boston. Chartered 1824, c. 26.
Boston Wharf Company, The, Boston. Chartered 1836, c. 259.
Boston Woven Hose and Rubber Company, Boston. Organization
certified June 25, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bourne Mills, Fall River. Organization ertified June 30, 1881.
1870, c. 224.
Bouv6, Crawford & Co. (Corporation), Boston. Organization certi-
fied October 24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bowenville Coal Company, The, Fall River. Organization certified
May 10, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bowker Fertilizer Company, Boston. Organization certified January
14, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Boyd and Corey Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Company, The,
Marlborough. Organization certified, November 10, 1883.
Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Boylston Insurance Company, Boston. Organization certified De-
cember 26, 1872. 1886, c. 58.
Boylston Market Association, The, Boston. Chaitered 1809. 1808,
c. 48.
Boylston Pharmacy (Incorporated), Boston. Organization certified
May 1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brackett's Market Corporation, Newton. Organization certified
July 29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bradford Joint Company, Plymouth. Organization certified Decem-
ber 22, 1871.
Bradford Water Company, Bradford. Chartered 1884, c. 136. Re-
vived 1886, c. 310.
Bradford Yarn Mills, Brookfield. Organization certified February 5,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bradley Fertilizer Company, Boston. Organization certified Novem-
ber 2, 1872.
Bradt and Woods Company, The, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified April 6, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brainard Milling Machine Company, Boston* Organization certified
July 8, 1871.
Braintree and Weymouth Street Railway Company. Organization
eertified October 12, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
BraiDtree Street Railway Company, The, Braintree. Oi^anization
certified September 13, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
36 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Braintree Wood and Lumber Company, Braintree. Organization
certified December 12, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brant Rock Water Company, Marshfield. Chartered 1890, c. 174.
Bridge water and East Bridge water Street Railway Company. Or-
ganization certified June 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Bridgewater Box Company, Bridgewater. Organization certified
June 7, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bridgewater Electric Company, The, Bridgewater. Organization
certified August 23, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bridgewaters Water Company, Bridgewater. Chartered 1887, c 192.
Briggs and Allyn Manufacturing Company, Lawrence* Organiza-
tion certified February 8, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Briggs Carriage Company, Amesbury. Organization certified Octo-
ber 4, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brigham' Factory Company, Whitman. Chartered 1887, c. 158.
Bristol Manufacturing Corporation, New Bedford. Organization
certified September 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brockton and Bridgewater Street Railway Company. Organization
certified June 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Brockton and East Bridgewater Street Railway Company. Organi-
zation certified June 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 118.
Brockton & Holbrook Street Railway Company, Brockton. Organ-
ization certified September 13, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 113.
Brockton and Stoughton Street Railway Company. Organization
certified June 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Brockton Co-operative Boot and Shoe Company, The, Brockton.
Organization certified November 26, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brockton Gas Light Company, Brockton. Organization certified
September 14, 1859. 1882, c. 38.
Brockton Industrial Corporation, Brockton. Organization certified
July 19, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brockton Publishing Company, The, Brockton. Organization certi-
fied June 1, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brockton Real Estate and Improvement Company, Brockton. Char-
tered 1884, c. 270.
Brockton Street Railway Company, Brockton. Organization certified
December 28, 1880.
Brookfield Brick Company, Brookfield. Organization certified May
31, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brookfield Shoe Company, Brookfield. Organization certified July 3,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brookline and Peppercll Railroad Company, Groton. Organization
certified October 1, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 112,
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUxMENT — No. 16. 37
Brookline Artificial Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 14, 1892. Pub. SUt., c. 106.
Brookline Gas Light Company, Brookline. Chartered 1853, c. 17.
Brookside Paper Manufacturing Company, New Marlborough. Or-
ganization certified June 19, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Brophy Bros. Shoe Co., Lynn. Organization certified October 28,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brown and Simpson Company, The, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied March 24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brown Bag Filling Machine Company, The, Fitchburg. Organiza-
tion certified April 22, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Brown Electric Company, Boston. Organization certified December
31, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bryant Box Company, The, Westfield. Organization certified June
30, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bufford*8 Sons Lithographic Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified June 21, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Buildings Cleaning Co., The, Boston. Organization certified July 8,
1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bu^et & Lewis Company, Great Barrington. Organization certified
March 8, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Burke Heel Company, Rowley. Organization certified July 8, 1893.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Burleigh Rock Drill Company, The, Fitchburg. Organization certi-
fied December 16, 1867.
Burleigh Tunnel Company, The, Fitchburg. Organization certified
February 27, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Burnett Paint Company, Pepperell. Organization certified October
2.5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Bort and Packard Company, The, Brockton. Organization certified
January 24, 1894. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Bnrtworth Carpet Company, Springfield. Organization certified
December 11, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Batcher Cyclometer Company, Boston. Organization certified Feb-
ruary 19, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Batcher Polish Company, The, Boston. Oi^anization certified May
24, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Batchers' Rendering Association Co-operative, Woburn. Organiza-
tion certified July 26, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Butchers' Rendering Company of Fall River, The, Fall River. Or-
ganization certified November 9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Botcbers' Slaughtering and Melting Association, Brighton. Char-
tered 1870, c. S65.
38 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Butler Milling Company, Lowell. Organization certified December
24, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Butterfield Printing and Binding Company, Lowell. Organization
certified January 2, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Buttrick Lumber Company, The, Waltham. Organization certified
April 30, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Byron Weston Company, Dalton. Organization certified September
21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. A. Cross & Co., Incorporated, Fitchburg. Organization certified
May 24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. A. Edgarton Manufacturing Company, The, Shirley. Organiza-
tion certified February 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. A. Nichols Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
July 17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c 106.
C. B. Cook Laundry Company, Worcester. Organization certified
June 9, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. E. Macomber Company, Fall River. Organization certified May
3, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. E. Osgood Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Jan-
uary 1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. F. Paige & Co., Incorporated, Athol. Organization certified
March 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. H. Dunham Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
August 17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. I. W. Maynard Company, Lowell. Organization certified Sep-
tember 10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. S. Grieves Paint Co., Amesbury. Organization certified January
5, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C. T. Sampson Manufacturing Company, North Adams. Organiza-
tion certified December 17, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
C. W. Mutell Manufacturing Company, The, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified October 31, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cable Rubber Company, Boston. Organization certified November
13, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Calumet Woolen Company, Uxbridge. Organization certified May
9, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cambridge Baking Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
January 5, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cambridge District Messenger Company, The, Cambridge. Organ-
ization certified Nov. 24, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cambridge Electric Light Company, Cambridge. Organization certi-
fied January 28, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cambridge Gas Light Company, Cambridge. Chartered 1852, c. 36.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 39
Cambridge Lyceam, Cambridge. Organized May, 1841. Rev. Stat.,
c. 41 ; 1869, c. 271.
Cambridge Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Cambridge. Chartered
1890, c. 287.
Cambridge Vinegar Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
Jnly 16, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cambridgeport Diary Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
February 13, 1873.
Cantelo Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
August 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cape Ann Anchor Works, Gloucester. Organization certified June
26, 1868.
Cape Ann Drop Forge Works, Gloucester. Organization certified
May 14, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cape Ann Granite Railroad Company, The, Gloucester. Organized
September 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 112.
Cape Ann Isinglass Company, Rockport. Organization certified
November 26, 1872. 1879, c. 84.
Cape Ann Printing Company, Gloucester. Organization certified
December 4, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cape Cod Ship Canal Company, Sandwich. Chartered 1883, c. 259 ;
1884, c. 274 ; 1887, c. 222 ; 1891, c. 397.
Cape Cod South Side Railroad Company. Chartered 1894, c. 468.
Cape Poge Ferry Company, Cottage City. Chartered 1891, c. 146.
Carew Freestone Company, The, Boston. Oi^anization certified
December 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Carew Manufacturing Company, South Hadley. Chartered 1848, c.
175.
Carpenter-Morton Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 20, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Carter, Rice <& Co., Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
July 23, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Carver Cotton Gin Company, East Bridgewater. Oi^anization certi-
fied July 23, 1872.
Cascade Power Company, The, Westfield. Organization certified
July 13, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cassino Art Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 28, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
C&ton Medical Specific Company, Boston. Organization certified
September 4, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cattte Fair Hotel, Brighton. Chartered 1830. 1829, c. 123.
Central Massachasetts Electric Company, Palmer. Organization
certified January 13, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
40 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Central Massacbasetts Railroad Company. Authorized 1883, c. 64.
Organized November 10, 1883.
Central Mica Mining Company, New Bedford. Organization cer-
tified May 9, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Central Mills Company, Southbridge. Chartered 1863, c. 8.
Central Square Wharf Company, East Boston. Chartered 1848,
c. 298.
Central Wharf and Wet Dock Corporation, The, Boston. Chartered
1815. 1814, c. 172.
Century Manufacturing Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified August 2, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Century Stove Company, The, Dighton. Organization certified
December 8, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chace Mills, Fall River. Organization certified November 11, 1871.
Chad wick Lead Works, Boston. Organization certified March 13,
1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chadwick Plush Company, Holyoke. Organization certified February
24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chamberlin & Sawyer Co., Worcester. Organization certified Febru-
ary 12, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Champion Card and Paper Company, Pepperell. Organization cer-
tified June 16, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chandler Adjustable Chair and Desk Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified February 9, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chapman Valve Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization
certified July 20, 1874.
Charlemont Co-operative Association, Charlemont. Organization
certified September 7, 1892.
Charlemont Co-operative Creamery, Charlemont. Organization cer-
tified April 6, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charles A. Millen Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 12, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charles A. White Company, Boston. Organization certified July 26,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charles Baker Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
April 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charles E. Harwood Company, Lynn. Organization certified Decem-
ber 24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charles F. Bates Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization
certified June 21, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Charles J. Jager Company, Boston. Organization certified December
2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1&95.3 PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 41
Charles Perry Manafacturiug Company, Rehoboth. Organization
certified October 15, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106. *
Charles River Embankment Company, Boston. Chartered 1881, c.
211. 1891, c. 306.
Chas. S. Binner Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
November 7, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charles S. Brown Company, Boston. Organization certified April
10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charles Wing Company, The, Amesbury. Organization certified
November 20, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charlestown Enterprise Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 6, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Charlestown Gas and Electric Company, Boston. Chartered 1846,
c- 98. 1891, c. 360.
Charlestown Stove Co., The, Boston. Organization certified Novem-
ber 23, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chase & Company Corporation, Boston. Organization certified July
27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chase Elevator and Manton Windlass Company, Fall River. Organ-
ization certified October 29, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106. 1891,
c. 360.
Chase Turbine Manufacturing Company, Orange. Organization cer-
tified March 6, 1874.
Chatham Railroad Company, Chatham. Organization certified
February 25, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 112.
ChauDcy Hall School, Boston. Organized March 24, 1874. Gen.
Stat., c. 32.
Chebaceo House Company, The, Hamilton. Organization certified
May 3, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chelmsford Foundry Company, Chelmsford. Organization certified
May 23, 1859.
Chelsea Cordage Company, Chelsea. Organization certified February
12, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chelsea Express Despatch Company, Chelsea. Organization certified
October 6, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chelsea Gas Light Company, Chelsea. Chartered 1852, c. 179.
Chelsea Pottery, U. S., The, Chelsea. Organization certified July
15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chelsea Wire Fabric Rubber Company, Chelsea. Organization cer-
tified February 26, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chemical Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified January
9, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Cheney Bigelow Wire Works, Springfield. Organization certified
July 13, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
42 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Cheqaasset Lamber Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 27, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cheshire Shoe Manufacturing Company, Cheshire. Organization
certified February 25, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cheshire Water Company, Cheshire. Chartered 1875, c. 41.
Cheshire White Quartz Sand Company, Cheshire. Organization
certified March 9, 1876.
Chester Co-operative Cream Ay Association, Chester. Organization
certified February 24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chester Paper Company, The, Huntington. Organization certified
March 30, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chestnut Hill Real Estate Association of Marlborough, Marlborough.
Chartered 1888, c. 61.
Chicopee Electric Light Company, Chicopee. Organization certified
March 1, 1887. Pub. Stftt*, C IM.
— "•»
«/• AWf.
Childs & Kent Express Company, Lynn. Organization certified
October 12, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Chisel Edge Nut Lock Co., New Bedford. Organization certified
November 22, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Choate Drug and Chemical Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified September 14, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Christian Register Association, The, Boston. Organization certified
July 11, 1872.
Christian Witness Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
May 25, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106. Change of name, 1891, c.
360.
Church Cleansing Company, Boston. Organization certified March
4, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Church Mills Knitting Company, Middlefield. Organization certified
August 6, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cigar Makers Co-operative Association, The, Boston. Organization
certified March 26, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Citizen Newspaper Company, The, Lowell. Organization certified
March 27, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Citizen Publishing Company, Somerville. Organization certified
November 12, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Citizens' Building Company, Athol. Organization certified Septem-
ber 12, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 43
Citizens' Gas Company of Medford, Medford. Organization cer-
tified December 10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Citizens' Gas Light Company of Quincy, Quincy. Chartered 1860,
c. 86.
Citizens' Gas Light Company of Reading, South Reading and Stone-
ham, Wakefield. Organization certified January 10, 1862.
City Job Print Company, The, Clinton. Organization certified March
17, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
City Manufacturing Corporation, New Bedford. Organization cer-
tified Apnl 23, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
City Mills Company, Franklin. Organization certified January 30,
1879. 1870, c. 224.
City of Mexico, Tampico & Rio Grande Railroad Company, Mexico.
Organization certified August 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 112.
£rratuh.
On page 43 read ** Claims Adjustment Corporation, The "
instead of ^*- Claims Adjustable Corporation, The."
1876.
Clark and Chapman Machine Company, Montague. Organization
certified September 15, 1871.
Clark-Hutchinson Company, Boston. Organization certified May
24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Clark Sawyer Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
March 24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Clark W. Bryan Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
May '28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Clark's Cove Guano Company, New Bedford. Organization certified
January 25, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Clement Manufacturing Company, Northampton. Organization cer-
tified July 7, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
demons Electrical Manufacturing Company, Attleborough. Organ-
ization certified December 19, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Clicquot Club Bottling and Extract Company, Millis. Organization
certified June 15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Climax Manufacturing Company, The, Boston, Organization cer-
tified November 1, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Clinton Express, The, Clinton. Organization certified May 10,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Clinton Gas Light Company, Clinton. Chartered 1854, c. 62.
Clinton Market Compari^, Boston. Chartered 1884, c. 83.
44 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Clinton Printing Company, The, Clinton. Organization certified
April 25, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Clinton Street Railway Company, The, Clinton. Organization cer-
tified April 26, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Clinton Wire Cloth Company, Clinton. Organized 1856, under 1851,
c. 133. 1870, c. 224, § 12.
Coates Clipper Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization
certified January 16, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cobb Stove and Machine Compapy, Taunton. Organization certified
January 23, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Coburn and Taylor Manufacturing Company, Holyoke. Organization
certified November 27, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Coburn Manufacturing Company, Framingham. Organization cer-
tified June 12, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Coburn Stationery Company, Boston. Organization certified May
14, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Coburn Trolley Track Manufacturing Company, The, Holyoke.
Organization certified February 15, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cochichewick Lake Ice Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
April 3, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cochrane Carpet Company, Maiden. Organization certified April
24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cochrane Chemical Company, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 15, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Coes Wrench Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
March 31, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cohannet Mills, Taunton. Organization certified July 8, 1874.
Cohasset Electric Company, Cohasset. Organization certified July
31, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cohasset Water Company, Cohasset. Chartered 1886, c. 128.
Colchester Mill Company, The, Amesbury. Organization certified
May 12, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Coleman Cotton Mills, Boston. Organization certified August 18,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Collateral Loan Company, Boston. Chartered 1859, c. 173. 1869,
c. 428.
Collins Manufacturing Company, The, Wilbraham. Organization
certified April 10, 1876.
Collyer Insulated Wire Company, The, Hopedale. Organization
certified March 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Columbia Rubber Company, Boston. Organization certified June 1,
1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
.1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT -r- No. 16. 45
Colambia Spinning Company, New Bedford. Organization certified
August 30, 1892. Pub. Stat., e. 106.
Columbia Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1S92, c. 400.
Columbian Printing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
March 21, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Commercial Tow Boat Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 5, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Commercial Union Telegraph Company of Massachusetts, The, Bos-
ton. Organization certified August 3, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Commercial Wharf Company, The, Boston. Chartered 1832, c. 51.
1882, c. 39.
Commonwealth Jewelry Company, Boston. Organization certified
August 24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Commonwealth Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Commonwealth Shoe and Leather Company, Boston. Organization
certified May 9, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Composite Brake-Shoe Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 5, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Conanicut Mills, Fall River. Organization certified March 6, 1880.
1870, c. 224.
Conant Bros, and Bragg Co., Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Conant Hotel Company, The, Sterling. Organization certified Octo-
ber 24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Condor Iron Foundry Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Connecticut River Bridge, The Proprietors of, Montague. Chartered
1796.
Connecticut River Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
October 30, 1888. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Connecticut River Railroad Company, Northampton. Chartered
1845, c. 8. 1886, c. 16.
Connecticut Steam Stone Company, The, Cambridge. Organization
certified April 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Consolidation Steamboat Company, The, Salem. Organization cer-
tified January 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Constitution Wharf Company, Boston. Chartered 1855, c. 420.
Consumers* Gas Company, of Boston, Boston. Organization cer-
tified July 11, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cooveyancers Title Insurance Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified February 15, 1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106, and 1887, c. 214.
46 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Conway Co-operative Creamery of Conway, Mass., Conway, Or-
ganization certified May 25, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Conway Electric Street Railway Company, Conway. Chartered
1894, c. 252.
Co-operative Gas and Oil Stove Company, Boston. Organization
certified June 19, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Co-operative Store Company, The, Kingston. Organization certified
May 21, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Cordaville Woolen Company, Southborough. Organization certified
March 9, 1876. 1870, c. 224.
Cordis Mills, Millbury. Organization certified June 25, 1875.
1870, c. 224.
Corey Leather Company, Boston. Organization certified December
28, 1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Cornelius Callahan Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
May 21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cornell Mills, Fall River. Organization certified March 80, 1889.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Corwin-Wilde Company, The, Boston. Organization certified March
29, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cotocheset Company, Barnstable. Organization certified September
13, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cottage City Gas and Electric Light Company, The, Cottage City.
Organization certified May 9, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cottage City Street Railway Company, Cottage City. Organization
certified March 2, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Cottage City Water Company, Cottage City. Chartered 1890, c. 151.
Courier-Citizen Company, Lowell. Organization certified November
19, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Courier Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified July 8,
1871.
Cowell and Hall Manufacturing Company, The, Wrentham. Organ-
ization certified September 1, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Craig & Richards Granite Company, The, Quincy. Organization
certified August 23, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Craighead & Kintz Company, Andover. Organization certified June
22, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Criterion Knitting Company, Lowell. Organization certified Novem-
ber 19, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Crocker Harness Company, Tisbury. Organization certified Decem-
ber 22, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Crocker Manufacturing Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
May 25, 1871.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 47
Croinptx>n Associates, Worcester. Chartered 1893, c. 410.
Crompton Loom Works, Worcester. Organization certified March
3, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Crosby Steam Gage and Valve Company, Boston. Organization
certified August 6, 1875. 1870, c. 224.
Crosman Box Company, Lynn. Organization certified January 21,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Crowell Manufacturing Company, Gloucester. Organization certified
November 5, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Crystal Emery Wheel Company, The, Northampton. Organization
certified August 20, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Crystal Mills Company, Chester. Organization certified May 27,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Crystal Spring Bleaching and Dyeing Company, Freetown. Organ-
ization certified March 11, 1881. 1870, c. 224.1^
Cummington Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Cummington.
Organization certified July 8, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cundy Music Company, Boston. Organization certified December
29, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cunningham Iron Works Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 1, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Currier Telephone Bell Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 31, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Curtis and Pope Lumber Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 23, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106,
Curtis Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization certified
January 14, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Cutler Company, The, Wilbraham. Organization ceitified December
23, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cutler Lyons and Field, Incorporated, Greenfield. Organization
certified December 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Cutter and Walker Manufacturing Company, Lowell. Organization
certified April 14, 1875.
Cutter Tower Company, Boston. Organization certified July 9,
1878. 1870, c. 224.
Cycle Improvement Company, Westborough. Organization certified
December 8, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. A. Eaton Company, Boston. Organization certified January 6,
1894. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
D. & L, Slade Company, Boston. Organization certified January
22, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. C. Storr Furniture Company, The, Cambridge. Organization
certified January 27, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
48 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
D. D. White Shoe Company^ Taunton. Oi*ganization certified April
9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. Girouard Company, The, Spencer. Organization certified Janu-
ary 6, 1888. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
D. H. Brigham Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
March 24, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. L. Page Company, Lowell. Organization certified May 1, 1890.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. Lothrop Company, Boston. Organization certified February 26,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. Mackintosh & Sons Company, The, Holyoke. Organization cer-
tified July 11, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. S. McDonald Company, Boston. Organization certified March 4,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. S. Quirk Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 7, 189>. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. T. Dudley and Son Company, The, Sutton. Organization cer-
tified December 20, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
D. Webster King Glue Company, Boston. Organization certified
September 7, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Daily News Company, The, Lowell. Organization certified July 6,
1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Daily News Publishing Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified November 21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dalton Ingersoll Company, Boston. Organization certified February
27, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dalton Shoe Co., Dalton. Organization certified June 15, 1889.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dalzell Axle Company, Egremont. Organization certified October
2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Damon Brick Company, Lancaster. Organization certified February
14, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Damon Safe and Iron Works Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified January 1, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dana Hardware Company, Boston. Organization certified July 28,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Daniels Cornell Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
September 27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Danvers Co-operative Association, Danvers. Organization certified
August 16, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Danvers Co-operative Union Society, Danvers. Organization certified
January 19, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Danvers Gas Light Company, Danvers. Organization certified
August 1, 1861.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 49
Danvers Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1852, c. 32.
Danversport Rabber Company, The, Danvers. Organization certified
June 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., e. 106.
Dart Express Company, Marlborough. Organization certified July
28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dartmouth and Westport Street Railway Company, Dartmouth.
Organization certified March 10, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Davenport and Hersey Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 31, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Davis and Famum Manufacturing Company, Waltham. Organiza-
tion certified January 29, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Davis and Furber Machine Company, North Andover. Organization
certified January 15, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Davis and McLane Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organiza-
tion certified January 25, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Davis Chapin Company, The, Boston. Organization certified March
31, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Davis Coast Wrecking Corporation, New Bedford. Organization
certified June 27, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Davis Company, The, Rowe. Organization certified July 10, 1883.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Davis Sulphur Ore Company, Rowe. Organization certified June 7,
1889. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Davol Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1867, c. 175.
Day and Jobson Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
July 6, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Day Cordage Company, Cambridge. Organization certified March
24, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dean- Whiting Elevator Co., The, Worcester. Organization certified
September 1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Deane Steam Pump Com pan v. The, Holyoke. Organization certified
December 6, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Dedham and Hyde Park Gas and Electric Light Company, Dedham.
Chartered 1853, c. 68 ; 1871, c. 292 ; 1886, c. 206.
Dedham Electric Company, Dedham. Organization certified Decem-
ber 5, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
'Dedham Lumber Company, Boston. Organization certified May 4,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dedham Water Company, Dedham. Chartered 1876, c. 13^.
DenisoD Brothers Company, New Bedford. Organization certified
March 7, 1891- Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dennifloo Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 15, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
50 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Dennisport Fishing Company, Dennis. Organization certified Decem-
ber 8, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Densmore-Yost Company, Westborough. Organization certified
August 3, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Derby, Kilmer & Pond Desk Co., Boston. Organization certified
July 8, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
Dickinson Hard Rubber Company, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified February 6, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Dighton Furnace Company, Taunton. Organization certified April
25, 1870, under Gen. Stat., c. 61.
Dighton Manufacturing Company, (North) Dighton. Chartered
1822, c. 10.
Dighton Stove Lining Company, Dighton. Organization certified
February 2, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Douahoe's Magazine Company, Boston. Organization certified April
12, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dorchester Chemical Company, Boston. Organization certified Sep-
tember 19, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dorchester Gas Light Company, Dorchester. Chartered 1854, c. 9.
Dorchester Hygeia Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 23, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dover Stamping Company, Cambridge. Organization certified Janu-
ary 6, 1871.
Dow Adjustable Light Company, Boston. Organization certified
September 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Downer Kerosene Oil Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 7, 1860.
Downs and Watson Company, Lynn. Organization certified Decem-
ber 28, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dr. J. Melvin Company, The, Lowell. Organization certified Sep-
tember 25, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Dracut Water Supply Company, Dracut. Chartered 1890, c. 344.
Drainage Construction Company, Boston. Organization certified
August 17, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Draper Brothers Company, Canton. Organization certified February
5, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Draper Machine Tool Company, Worcester. Organization certified
May 21, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Drapery fixture and Wood Carving Company, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified December 1, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dresser Manufacturing Company, Southbridge. Chartered 1834,
c. 32.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 51
Dnscoll and Eaton Manufacturing Company, Natick. Organization
certified September 17, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Drivers Union Ice Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
April 1, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dudley Feed Mills Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
August 26, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dudley Mills, Boston. Organization certified July 14, 1887. Pub.
Stat., c. 106.
Dunbar Mills Company, The, North Adams. Organization certified
August 29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Duncan & Groodell Co., Worcester. Organization certified July 19,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Duncan Leather Manufacturing Company, Woburn. Organization
certified May 3, 1887. P.ub. Stat., c. 106.
Dunne Lyceum Bureau, The, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 10, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dupaul Toung Optical Company, Southbridge. Organization cer-
tified June 20, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Dnrfee Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1866, c. 31.
Dutcher Temple Company, Milford. Organization certified Decem-
ber 18, 1867.
Dwelling House Insurance Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 30, 1872. 1872, c. 375, § 9.
Dwight Manufacturing Company, Chicopee. Chartered 1841, c. 13.
Dwight Printing Company, Ashland. Organization certified January
2, 1871.
£. A. Richmond Carriage Company, The, Worcester. Organization
certified September 1, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. A. Whitney Company, Boston. Organization certified August
22, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
£. and A. H. Batcheller Company, Boston. Organization certified
October 31, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
£. and A. Mudge Shoe Company, Boston. Organization certified
October 22, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. Anthony & Sons Incorporated, New Bedford. Organization cer-
tified December 24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
£. B. Horn Company, The, Boston. Organization certified April 1,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. B. Tinkham Shoe Company, New Bedford. Organization cer-
tified May 23, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
£. C. Manafactaring Company, Watertown. Organization certified
November 8, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
52 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT, [Jan.
£. D. Jones and Sons Company, Pittsfleld. Oiganization certified
April 14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. 6. Higgins Co., Worcester. Organization certified February 17,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. H. Clapp Rubber Company, Hanover. Organization certified
June 3, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. H. Mahoney Chair Company, Gai'dner. Organization certified
January 22, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. H. Saxton Company, Boston. Organization certified December
18, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. Howard Watch and Clock Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified November 26, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
E. P. Dodge Manufacturing Company, The, Newburyport. Organ-
ization certified April 27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. P. Sanderson Company, Boston. Organization certified June 21 ,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. Stebbins Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organization
certified February 13, 1868.
E. T. Cowdrey Company, Boston. Organization certified February
7, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. W. Clark Company, Boston. Organization certified July 26, 1894.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. W. Noyes Company, The, Boston. Organization certified June
10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. W. Walker Company, Boston. Organization certified December
6, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Eagle Cotton Gin Company, Bridgewater. Organization certified
October 23, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Eagle Mill Company, Athol. Organization certified January 8, 1868.
Eagle Publishing Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization certified
April 15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Earl Cranberry Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
East Boston Company, (East) Boston. Chartered 1833, c. 152.
East Boston Dry Dock Company, (East) Boston. Chartered 1847,
c. 116.
East Boston Furniture Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 27, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
East Boston Gas Company, (East) Boston. Chartered 1853, c. 13.
East Brookfield Woolen Company, Brookfield. Organization certified
September 20, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
East Cambridge Land Company, Cambridge. Chartered 1861, c
62.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 53
East Douglas Co-operative AssociatioD, Douglas. Organization cer-
tified April 6, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
East Middlesex Street Railway Company, Stoneham. Chartered
1860, c. 19. 1887, c. 257.
East Mountain Water Company, West Stockbridge. Chartered
1873, c. 184.
East Side Street Railway Company, Brockton. Organization cer*
tified March 8, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
East Wareham, Onset Bay and Point Independence Street Railway
Company, Wareham. Organization certified February 15, 1888.
Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Eastern Construction Company of Boston, The, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified March 9, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Elastem Expanded Metal Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 7, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Eastern Forge Co. of Massachusetts, Boston. Organization certified
October 5, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Eastern Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified October
30, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106. Change of name, 1891, c. 360.
Easthampton Gas Company, Easthampton. Organization certified
September 7, 1864.
Easthampton Rubber Thread Company, Easthampton. Organization
certified December 27, 1864.
Eastman Clock Company, Boston. Organization certified March 13,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Eaton and Stephens Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified December 28, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Eaton, May and Bobbins Paper Company, Lee. Organization cer-
tified July 8, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c 360.
Edes Manufacturing Company, Plymouth. Organization certified
September 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Edison Electric Illuminating Company of Boston, The, Boston. Or-
ganization certified January 8, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Edison Electric Illuminating Company of Brockton, The, Brockton.
Organization certified March 22, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Edison Electric Illuminating Company of Fall River, Fall River.
Organization certified October 1, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Edison Electric Illuminating Company of Lawrence, The, Lawrence.
Oi^anization certified August 26, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ediflon Electric Illuminating Comp&ny of New Bedford, The, New
Bedford. Organization certified May 27, 1884. Pub. Stat., c>
106.
Edmund S. Hunt and Sons Company, The, Weymouth. Organiza-
tion certified November 11, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
54 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Edson Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Educational Publishing Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified May 20, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Edward Perkins Lumber Co., Newburyport. Organization certified
April 28, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Edwards Grain Company, Southbridge. Organization certified May
18, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Egremont Co-operative Creamery Company, The, Egremont. Organ-
ization certified April 27, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Egremont Manufacturiug Company, Egremont. Organization cer-
tified December 18, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Elastic Box Toe Co-operative Association, The, Brockton. Organ-
ization certified January 27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Elastic Rubber Company, Boston. Organization certified December
2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
»
Electric Cigar Company, Boston. Organization certified February 5^
1891. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Electric Light and Power Company of Abington and Rockland, The*
Abington. Organization certified November 26, 1889. Pub.
Stat., c. 106.
Electric Lustre Starch Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 4, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Eliot Insurance Company, Boston. Organization certified December
31, 1872. 1872, c. 375, § 9.
Elizabeth Poole Mills, Taunton. Organization certified July 19,
1877. 1870, c. 224.
Ellerton Fishing Corporation, Falmouth. Organization certified
May 28, 1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Elliott Lumber Company, Marlborough. Organization certified May
16, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Ellis Foundry Company, Carver. Organization certified April 28,
1874.
Emerson, Low and Barber Company, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified September 13, 1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Emerson Manufacturing Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
July 18, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Emery Bemis & Co. (Incorp.), Boston. Organization certified
August 7, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Emmons Loom Harness Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
January 28, 1884. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Empire I^aundry Machinery Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified July 26, 1888. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 55
Engraver and Printer Company (corporation), The, Boston. Or-
ganization certified January 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Enterprise Publishing Company, Brockton. Organization certified
February 17, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Equitable Marine Insurance Company, Provincetown. Chartered
1845, c. 30.
Essex Company, Lawrence. Chartered 1845, c. 163.
Essex County Building Company, Salem. Chartered 1883, c. 206.
Essex County Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Salem. Chartered
1892, c. 397.
Essex County Street Railway Company. Chartered 1893, c. 388.
Essex Leather Company, Amesbury. Organization certified Novem-
ber 1, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
£ssex Manufacturing Company, Newburyport. Organization cer-
tified May 7, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Essex Marine Railway Corporation, Salem. Chartered 1826. 1825^
c. 66.
Essex Steam Mill Company, Essex. Organization certified October
13, 1871.
Eureka Ruling and Binding Company, Holyoke. Organization cer-
tified July 11, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Evening Gazette Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
June 24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Everett Cycle Company, Everett. Organization certified January 16,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Everett Herald Publishing Company, Everett. Organization cer-
tified August 22, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Everett Mills, Lawrence. Chartered 1860, c. 7.
Everett Piano Company, Boston. Organization certified November
20, 1883. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Everett Woolen Company, Great Barrington. Organization certified
February 9, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Every Saturday Publishing Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified May 18, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Excelsior Cement Company, Milford. Organization certified Febru-
ary 3, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Excelsior Cutlery Company, Worcester. Organization certified May
24, 1893. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Excelsior Shoe Company, The, Milford. Organization certified
Jane 9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Exeter and Araesbury Railroad Company, Amesbury. Chartered
1891, c. 231. 1893, c. 139.
56 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
F. A. Whitney Carriage Company, Leominster. Organization cer-
tified July 27, 1871.
F. B. Rogers Silver Company, Taunton. Organization certified
February 23, 1886. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
F. B. Washburn and Co. Corporation, Brockton. Organization cer-
tified March 7, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
F. E. Reed Company, Worcester. Organization certified April 23,
1894. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
F. E. Young Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
March 6, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
F. L. Hewes Paint Company, Springfield. Organization certified
January 19, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
F. O. Dewey Company, Boston. Organization certified February 2,
1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
F. P. Cox Laundry Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
Febmary 4, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
F. W. Wentworth Company, New Bedford. Organization certified
August 15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fairchild Paper Company, Boston. Organization certified January
3, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Fairfield Paper Company, Russell. Organization ceiiiified December
7, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fairhaven Iron Foundry Company, Fairhaven. Organization certi-
fied April 10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fairhaven Water Company, Fairhaven. Chartered 1888, c. 196 ;
1889, c. 381 ; 1893, c. 232.
Fall River and New Bedford Street Railway Company. Chartered
1893, c. 320.
Fall River and Providence Steamboat Company, Fall River. Organ-
ization certified September 25, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Fall River and Taunton Street Railway Company. Chartered 1893,
c. 421.
Fall River Automatic Lighting Company, Fall River. Organization
certified June 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fall River Bleachery, Fall River. Organization certified August 20,
1874.
Fall River Collateral Loan Association, Fall River. Chartered 1893,
c. 425.
Fall River Daily Globe Publishing Company, The, Fall River. Or-
« ganization certified May 1, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fall River Daily Herald Publishing Company, The, Fall River.
Organization certified April 16, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Fall River Electric Freight Railway Company, Fall River. Char-
tered 1891, c. 126. 1893, c. 184.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 57
Fall RiTer Electric Light Company, The, Fall River. Organization
certified March 7, 1883. Pnb. Stat., c. 106.
Fall River Gas Works Company, Fall River. Organization certified
September 25, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Fall River Granite Company, Fall River. Organization certified
Febmary 27, 1873.
Fall River Ice Company, Fall River. Organization certified Novem-
ber 24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fall River Iron Works Company, Fall River. Chartered 1825.
1824, c. 60.
Fall River Lithograph Company, The, Fall River. Organization
certified September 8, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fall River Loan and Trust Company, Fall River. Chartered 1891,
c. 168.
Fall River Machine Company, Fall River. Organization certified
September 25, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Fall River Manufactory, Fall River. Chartered 1820. 1819, c. 89.
Fall River Merino Company, The, Fall River. Organization certified
January 26, 1875.
Fall River Railroad Company, New Bedford. Organized under
1872, c. 58. Organization certified November 25, 1874.
Fall River Real Estate Association of Fall River, Fall River. Char-
tered 1892, c. 329.
Fall River Spool and Bobbin Company, Fall River. Organization
certified July 18, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Fall River Steam and Gas Pipe Company — corporation. Fall River.
Organization certified September 24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fall River Workingmen's Co-operative Association, Fall River.
Organized December 4, 1867. 1866, c. 290.
Falmouth Cranberry Company, The, Falmouth. Organization cer-
tified April 2, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Falmouth Heights Land and Wharf Company, Falmouth. Chartered
1871, c. 278.
Falmouth Heights Water Company, Falmouth. Chartered 1894, c.
400.
Family Co-operative Grocery Company, The, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified August 22, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Yarmington River Water Power Company, Otis. Chartered 1867, c.
1.34.
Farr Alpaca Company, Holyoke. Organization certified November
13, 1873,
Farren Hotel Company, Montague. Organization certified July 17,
1872.
58 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Farrington Printing Company, Boston. Organization certified July
14, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Farwell Bleachery, Lawrence. Organization certified November 29^
1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Faulkner Manufacturing Company, BiUerica. Organization certified
July 1, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Fayette Shaw Leather Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ferd. F. French <& Co., Limited, Boston. Organization certified
June 27, 1885. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Ferdinand Furniture Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified
November 30, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fiedler Silk Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
, May 11, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Field Thurber Company, Brockton. Organization certified January
10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fifield Tool Company, Lowell. Organization certified August 27,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fifty Associates, Boston. Chartered 1820. 1819, c. 138; 1823,
c. 15.
«
Finlay Paper Company, Newton. Organization certified November
29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Firemen's Fire Insurance Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 21, 1872, under 1872, c. 375, § 9.
First National Fire Insurance Company, Worcester. Chartered
1868, cc. 154, 269. 1869, c. 178.
First Swedish Co-operative Store Company of Quinsigamond, Worces-
ter, Mass., Worcester. Organization certified April 6, 1883.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
First Universalist Meeting House in Worcester, Proprietors of the,
Worcester. Chartered 1843, c. 59.
Fisher-Churchill Company, The, Dedham. Organization certified
August 7, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fisher Mauufacturing Company, The, Grafton. Organization cer-
tified August 16, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Fisk Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organization certified
November 10, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Fiskdale Mills, Sturbridge. Chartered 1836, c. 49.
Fiske Wharf and Warehouse Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified February 20, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fitchburg and Leominster Street Railway Company, Fitchburg.
Organization certified April 10, 1886. 1892, c. 85.
Fitchburg Gas Company, Fitchburg. Chartered 1852, c, 208.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16. 59
Fitchbarg Manufacturing Company, Fitchburg. Organization cer-
tified February 6, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fitchburg Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1842, c. 84.
Fitchburg Steam Engine Company, Fitchburg. Organization cer-
tified September 15, 1876.
Fitchburg Worsted Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified
November 1, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Fitts Land and Power Company, Worcester. Organization ceitified
October 24, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Flax Leather Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified August 31, 1863.
Flax Pond Fishing Company in Dennis, Dennis. Chai*tered 1852,
c. 68.
Flint Mills, Fall River. Organization certified February 28, 1872.
Florence Furniture Company, Northampton. Organization certified
June 23, 1873.
Florence Manufacturing Company, Florence, Northampton. Organ-
ized June 1, 1866.
Flynt Building and Construction Company, Palmer. Organization
certified March 2, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fobes, Hay ward & Co. (Incorporated) , Boston. Organization cer-
tified January 1, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Forbes Lithograph Manufacturing Company, The', Boston. Organ-
ization certified September 14, 1875. 1870, c. 224.
Ford Bit Company, The, Uolyoke. Organization certified March 18,
1892. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Forehand Arms Company, Worcester. Organization certified Novem-
ber 6, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Forest Avenue Street Railway Company, The, Brockton. Organiza-
tion certified September 27, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Foster's Wharf Company, Boston. Chartered 1875, c. 198.
Foundry Supply Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
April 16, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Foxboro* Foundry and Machine Company, Foxborough. Organiza-
tion certified July 30, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Foxboro' Manufacturing Company, Foxborough. Organization cer-
tified January 13, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
FramiDgham Box Company, The, Framingham. Organization certi-
fied February 19, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Fruningham Brass Manufacturing Company, The, Framingham.
Organization certified March 9, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Framiogbam Electric Company, Framingham. Organization cer-
tified August 24, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
60 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Framingham Gas Fuel and Power Company, The, Framingham.
Organization certified March 22, 1889. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Framingham Nursery Company, Framingham. Organization certi-
fied June 15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Framingham Odd Fellows' Building Association, Framingham.
Organization certified January 27, 1876.
Framingham Union Street Railway Company, Framingham. Organ-
ization certified October 1, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Framingham Water Company, Framingham. Chartered 1884, c. 271.
Frank E. Fitts Manufacturing and Supply Company, The, Boston.
Organization certified September 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Frank E. Sargent Company, The, Fall River. Organization certified
November 4, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Frank Keene Company, Lynn. Organization certified January 18,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Franklin Cotton Manufacturing Company, Franklin. Organization
certified March 22, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Franklin County Lumber Company, Greenfield. Organization certi-
fied July 18, 1898. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Franklin Educational Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 19, 1892. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Franklin Electric Light Company, Montague. Organization certified
December 17, 1886. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Franklin Osborn Company, Peabody. Organization certified June
20, 1891. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Franklin Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified January
23, 1866.
Franklin Park Land and Improvement Company, Boston. Organ-
ization certified February 9, 1880. 1870, c. 224; 1889, c. 102.
Franklin Telegraph Company, Boston. Chartered 1865, c. 119 ;
1869, c. 209.
Franklin Water Company, Franklin. Chartered 1883, c. 182.
Franklin Mills, The, Shelbume. Organization certified April 29,
1878. 1870, c. 224.
Frederick Taylor Company, Lowell. Organization certified June 5,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Freelaud Loomis Company, Boston. Organization certified January
17, 1891. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Freeman Manufacturing Company, North Adams. Organization cer-
tified January 5, 1874.
Freemasons' Hall Association, Haverhill. Chartered 1866, c. 177;
1873, c. 72.
1895-] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No, 16. 61
French Carriage Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
April 13, 1894. Puh. Stat., c. 106.
Fresh Pond Ice Company, Somerville. Organization certified Febru-
ary 10, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Frick Piano Case Co., Wendell. Organization certified May 4, 1893.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Frothingham Buildings, Boston. Chartered 1889, c. 171.
Fulton Iron Foundry Company, Boston. Chartered 1886, c. 266.
6. A..R. Mills, The, Boston. Organization certified September 6,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
G. and C. Merriam Company, Springfield. Organization certified
March 29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
6. D. Dows & Company, Incorporated, Boston. Organization cer-
tified March 20, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
6. W. & F. Smith Iron Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 31, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Gardner Egg Carrier Company, Gardner. Organization certified
October 7, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gardner Electric Light Company, Gardner. Organization certified
October 28, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gardner Electric Street Railway Company, Gardner. Organization
certified May 14, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Gardner Gas Fuel and Light Company, Gardner. Organization cer-
tified November 13, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gardner Sovereigns' Co-operative Association, The, Gardner. Or-
ganization certified February 4, 1875.
Gardner Water Company, Gardner. Chartered 1882, c. 145.
Garfield & Proctor Coal Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified
May 16, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Garratt-Ford Company, Boston. Organization certified January 22,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gately and Rogers Furniture Company, Worcester. Organization
certified October 5, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
Gay and Parker Company, Boston. Organization certified October
5, 1887. Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Geoige A. Schastey Company, Springfield. Organization certified
April 7, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Geo. C. Gill Paper Companv, The, Ilolyoke. Organization certified
July 23, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
Geo. C. Whitney Co., The, Worcester. Organization certified June
2, 1894. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
George £. Barnard Company, Lynn. Organization certified May 12,
1891. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
62 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT, [Jan.
George F. Hewett Co., Worcester. Organization certified April 14,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George Frost Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George G. Fox Company, Boston. Organization certified December
22, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George G. Page Box Company, The, Cambridge. Organization cer-
tified February 28, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George H. Corbett Company, Worcester. Organization certified
March 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George H. Gilbert Manufacturing Company, Ware. Chartered 1867,
c. 281.
George H. Poor Leather Company, Peabody. Organization certified
December 15, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George H. Wood Company, iBoston. Organization certified April
25, 1889. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
*
George Lawley and Son Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
November 18, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George N. Newhall Company, Worcester. Organization certified
July 28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George R. Dickinson Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization cer-
tified June 2, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George W. Gale Lumber Company, Cambridge. Organization
certified February 9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George W. Prouty Company, The, Gloucester. Organization cer-
tified October 30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Geo. W. Wheelwright Paper Company, Boston. Organization
certified January 28, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
George Whitney Woolen Company, Royalston. Organization certi-
fied August 2, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
George Woodman Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 27, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Georgetown Boot & Shoe Company, Georgetown. Organization
certified October 20, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
German American Publishing Company, The', Holyoke. Organiza-
tion certified July 8, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
German Co>operative Association, Lawrence. Organization certified
February 3, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Germania Mills (Hartford, Conn.), Holyoke. Organization certified
January 19, 1865.
Gibbs Loom Harness and Reed Company, Clinton. Organization
certified March 30, 1874,
Gilbert and Barker Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organ-
ization certified March 31, 1870, under Gen. Stat., c. 61.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 63
Gilbert Corset Company, Springfield. Organization certified July 31,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gilbert Loom Company, Worcester. Organization certified July 25,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Glasgo Thread Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
March 81, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Glasgow Company, South Hadley Falls. Chartered 1848, c. 15.
Glasgow Manufacturing Company, South Hadley. Organization cer-
tified January 24, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Glencoe Granite Company, Quincy. Organization certified April 15,
1890. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Glendale Elastic Fabrics Company, Easthampton. Organization cer-
tified October 26, 1868.
Glen wood Furnishing Company, The, Taunton. Organization cer-
tified February 15, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Globe Gas Light Company, Boston. Organization certified October
6, 1874.
Globe Investment Company, Boston. Organization certified May 3,
1884. 1888, c. 410.
Globe Nail Company, Boston. Organization certified May 23, 1868.
Globe Newspaper Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 31, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Globe Stereotype Company, Boston. Organization certified October
5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Globe Street Railway Company, Fall River. Organization certified
April 16, 1880. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Globe Worsted Mills, Lawrence. Organization certified November
8, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Globe Yarn Mills, The, Fall River. Organization certified April 16,
1881. 1870, c. 224.
Gloucester and Rockport Street Railway Company. Organization
certified November 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Gloucester Co-operative Association, Gloucester. Organization cer-
tified June 16, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gloucester Electric Company, Gloucester. Organization certified
April 13, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gloucester, Essex and Beverly Street Railway Company, Gloucester.
Chartered 1893, c. 159.
Gloucester Fish Company, Boston. Organization certified Septem-
ber 13, 1888. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Gloucester Fish Drying Company, Gloucester. Organization certified
April 18, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gloucester Gsb Light Company, Gloucester. Chartered 1853, c. 18.
64 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Gloucester Isinglass and Glue Company, Gloucester. Organization
certified January 4, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Gloucester Lighterage Company, The, Gloucester. Organization
certified April 18, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gloucester Net and Twine Company, Gloucester. Organization cer-
tified March 12, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gloucester Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Gloucester. Char-
tered 1891, c. 26.
Gloucester Street Railway Company, Gloucester. Chartered 1881,
c. 279. Organization certified December 29, 1885. Pub. Stat.,
c. 113.
Gloucester Tow Boat Company, The, Gloucester. Organization cer-
tified November 14, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gloucester Water Supply Company, Gloucester. Chartered 1881,
c. 167.
Goddard Machine Company, The, Ilolyoke. Organization certified
July 24, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Goepper Brothers -Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
March 20, 1898. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Goetz Silk Manufacturing Co., Holyoke. Organization certified
February 8, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Golden Rule Company, The, Boston. Organization certified March
2, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gould and Cutler Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
December 81, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gowdy & Remington Shoe Company, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified March 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Grafton and Upton Railroad Company, Grafton. Organization cer-
tified October 22, 1878. 1888, c. 45.
Grafton Electric Company, The, Grafton. Organization certified
October 8, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Grafton Ice Company, The, Grafton. Organization certified Jan-
uary 16, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Grafton Water Company, The, Grafton. Chartered 1886, c. 211.
1887, c. 95.
Granby Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Granby. Organ-
ization certified January 21, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Granite Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1863, c. 48.
Granite Railway Company, Boston and Quincy. Chartered 1826.
1825, c. 183.
Granite Shoe Company, Lynn. Organization certified October 5,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Granite Wharf Marine Railway, Fairhaven. Chartered 1853, c. 112.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 65
GrantrSanger Confectionery Company, The, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified October 20, 1893. Fub. Stat., c. 106.
Grant Yarn Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified February
29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Graphic Publishing Company, The, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified AprU 12, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Graton and Knight Manufacturing Company, The, Worcester. Or-
ganization certified January 1, 1872.
Great Harrington Coal Company, Great Barrington. Organization
certified April 17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Great Barrington Electric Light Company, Great Barrington. Or-
ganization certified January 5, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Great Barrington Gas Light Company, Great Barrington. Organ-
ization certified November 27, 1855. 1891, c. 279.
Great Pasture Company, Salem. Chartered 1855, c. 114.
Greenfield Electric Light and Power Company, The, Greenfield.
Organization certified December 30, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Greenfield Gas Light Company, Greenfield. Chartered 1854, c. 212.
Greenfield Power Company, The, Greenfield. Organization certified
April 2, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Greylock Mills, The, Pittsfield. Organization certified June 7, 1880.
1870, c. 224.
Greylock Park Association, Adams, North Adams, Williamstown.
Chartered 1885, c. 166.
Greylock Shirt Company, Adams. Organization certified September
I, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106. Change of name, 1891, c. 360.
GrifiSth, Axtell and Cady Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
April 12, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Grinnell Manufacturing Corporation, New Bedford. Organization
certified March 14, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Grip Machinery Company, Maiden. Organization certified October
II, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Griswoldville Manufacturing Company, Colrain. Chartered 1840,
c. 51.
Guptill Company, The, Boston. Organization certified December 5,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Gumey Heater Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified November 10, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106. Change of
name, 1891, c. 360.
H. A. Lothrop Manufacturing Company, The, Sharon. Organiza-
tion certified May 6, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
H. A. Williams Manufacturing Company, Taunton. Organization
certified July 22, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
66 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
H. B. Smith Company, The, Westfield. Organization certified Octo-
ber 25, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
H. B. Stevens Company, Boston. Organization certified Augast 19,
1891. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
H. D. Watson Publishing Company, Greenfield. Organization cer-
tified June 14, 1886. Pub. Stat., c 106.
H. F. Ross Company, Newton. Organization certified December 29,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
H. G. Jordan & Co., Incorporated, Boston. Organization certified
September 80, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
H. H. Mayhew Company, Shelburne. Organization certified April
5, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
H. M. Richardson Carriage Company, The, Leominster. Organiza-
tion certified January 25, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
H. R. Barker Manufacturing Company, The, Lowell. Organization
certified May 10, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
H. S. Lawrence Clothing Co., Boston. Organization certified March
28, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
H. W. Downs Company, Boston. Organization certified November
26, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hadley Company, Holyoke. Chartered 1868, c. 94.
Hallet & Davis Piano Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organ-
ization certified April 1, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Hamblin and Russell Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified June 10, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1887, c.
151.
Hamilton Manufacturing Company, The, Lowell. Chartered 1825.
1824, c. 44.
Hamilton Woolen Company, Boston and Southbridge. Chartered
1831. 1830, c. 20.
Hammond Reed Company, Worcester. Organization certified April
13, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hampden Co-operative Association, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified September 19, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hampden Emery and Corundum Company, Chester. Organization
certified February 7, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hampden Glazed Paper and Card Company, Holyoke. Organization
certified November 8, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Hampden Loan and Trust Company, Springfield. Chartered 1887,
c. 337.
Hampden Paint and Chemical Company, Springfield. Chartered
1852, c. 89. 1854, c 268.
Hampden Watch Company, Springfield. Organization certified May
12, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 67
Hampshire Paper Company, South Hadley Falls. Organization certi-
fied June 6, 1866.
Hampshire Reservoir Company, The, Northampton. Organization
certified March 25, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Hampton Co-operative Creamery Association, Easthampton. Organ-
ization certified June 6, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Hancock Inspirator Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 80, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Hanover Street Railway Company, Hanover. Organization certified
August 1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Hanover Water Company, Hanover. Chartered 1891, c. 898.
Harbor Bar Fish Weir Company, Truro. Organization certified
March 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hardy Company, Boston. Organization certified July 25, 1894.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hargraves Mills, Fall River. Organization certified July 13, 1888.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Harrington & Richardson Arms Company, Worcester. Organization
certified January 17, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Harvard Brass Company, Cambridge. Organization certified Decem-
ber 22, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Harvard Piano Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
Febraary 2, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Harwood and Quincy Machine Company, The, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified March 80, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Harwood Manufacturing Company, Leominster. Organization cer-
tified May 29, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hastings & Sons Publishing Company, Lynn. Organization certified
June 6, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hatch- Wall Flashing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hathaway Manufacturing Company, The, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified February 4, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hathaway, Soule & Harrington, Incorporated, Boston. Organization
certified June 3, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Havenner & Davis, Incorporated, Boston. Organization certified
October 1, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Haverhill and Amesbury Street Railway Company, Haverhill.
Chartered 1892, c. 217.
Haverbill Aqueduct Company, Haverhill. Organized December 2,
1802. 1867, c. 73.
Haverhill Electric Company, Haverhill. Organization certified De-
cember 7, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
HaverLill Gas Light Company, Haverhill. Chartered 1853, c. 8.
68 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Haverhill Gazette Company, The, Haverhill. Organization certified
July 31, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Haverhill, Georgetown and Danvers Street Railway Company.
Chartered 1893, c. 384.
Haverhill Hat Company, Haverhill. Organization certified April 10,
1871.
Haverhill Ice Company, The, Haverhill. Organization certified
December 27, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Haverhill Iron Works, The, Haverhill. Organization certified Novem-
ber 29, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Haverhill Odd Fellows' Hall Association, Haverhill. Chartered 1868,
c. 266.
Haverhill Paper Company, The, Bradford. Organization certified
July 9, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Haverhill Roller Toboggan Company, The, Haverhill. Organization
certified February 2, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Haverhill Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Haverhill. Chartered
1891, c. 110.
Hawks Electric Company, Boston. Organization certified December
31, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Haydenville Manufacturing Company, The, Williamsburg. Organ-
ization certified July '22, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Heath Co-operative Creamery Association, Heath. Organization cer-
tified March 27, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Heliotype Printing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
February 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Henry C. Hunt Company, Boston. Organization certified May 16,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Henry C. King Company, Lawrence. Organization certified October
"26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Henry C. Weeden Company, Boston. Organization certified March
6, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Henry F. Miller and Sons Piano Company, Boston. Organization
certified November 18, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Henry W. Wellington Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Henry Wood's Sons Company, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 5, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hercules Foundry Company, Boston. Organization certified June
19, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Herdic Phaeton Company, Boston. Organization certified May 4,
1881. 1870, c. 224.
Hermon Street Foundry Company, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied April 4, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 69
Hero Cough Syrop Company, The, Westborough. Organizatioa
certified December 31, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
HetberstOQ Importing Company, The, Boston. Organization certi*
fied April 9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Heywood Boot and Shoe Company, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied December 11, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
High Rock Granite Company, The, Attleborough. Organization
certified December 15, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Highland Foundry Company, Boston. Organization certified April
22, 1876.
Highland Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified May 4,
1881. 1870, c. 224.
Highland Mills, Huntington. Organization certified August 19, 1873.
Highland Street Railway Company, The, Westfield. Organization
certified March 6, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Hill Water Company, Stockbridge. Chartered 1885, c. 100.
Hills Company, The, Amherst. Organization certified August 16,
1877. 1870, c. 224.
Hingbam Cordage Company, Hingham. Chartered 1853, c. 370.
Hiogham Dairy Association, Boston. Organization certified October
10, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hingham Seam Face Granite Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied October 12, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hingham Water Company, Hingham. Chartered 1879, c. 139.
Hingham Wharf and Land Company, Hingham. Chartered 1847,
c. 108.
Hinsdale Co-operative Creamery Association, Hinsdale. Organiza-
tion certified July 31, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hodges Mansur Co., Boston. Organization certified May 29, 1889.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
HoUingsworth & Vose Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 6, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
HoUingsworth and Whitney Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied February 24, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
HoUiston Harness Company, Holliston. Organization certified Feb-
ruary 13, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holliston Shoe Company, Holliston. Organization certified July 1,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holliston Water Company, Holliston. Chartered 1884, c. 106.
1887, c. 80.
Holmes & Blanchard Company, Boston. Organization certified Sep-
tember 8, J894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
70 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Holmes Provision and. Cold Storage Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified Marcli 6, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holtzer-Cabot Electric Company, Tlie, Boston. Organization certi-
fied February 26, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke and Northampton Boom and Lumber Company, Northamp-
ton, Chartered 1871, c. 362. 1873, c. 215. Organized May
8, 1873. 1891, c. 282.
Holyoke and South Hadley Falls Ice Company, The, Holyoke.
Organization certified November 29, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke and Westfield Railroad Company, Holyoke. Chartered
1869, c. 879-.
•
Holyoke Bar Co., The, Holyoke. Organization certified February 5,
1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke Card and Paper Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified March 10, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke Coal and Wood Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
October 6, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke Dry Goods Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
March 26, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke Envelope Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
December 10, 1880, 1870, c. 224.
Holyoke Hydrant and Iron Works, Holyoke. Organization certified
May 20y 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke Machine Company, Holyoke. Organization certified Janu-
ary 25, 1864. Confirmed November 22, 1871.
Holyoke Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Salem. Chartered March
14, 1843. 1872, c. 375. February 26, 1873.
Holyoke Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified May 19,
1857.
Holyoke Snath Company, The, Holyoke. Organization certified
May 15, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Holyoke Street Railway Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
June 11, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Holyoke Warp Company, Holyoke. Organization certified March
31, 1869, under Gen. Stat., c. 61.
Holyoke Water Power Company, Holyoke. Chartered 1859, c. 6.
Home Newspaper Publishing Company, Westfield. Organization
certified September 26, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hood Bros. Company, Quincy. Organization certified Januai-y 22,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hook and Hastings Company, The, Weston. Organization certified
October 20, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hoosac Tunnel and Wilmington Railroad Company, Rowe. Organ-
ized December 28, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 112; 1887, c. 238.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 71
Hoosac Tunnel Dock and Elevator Company, Boston. Chartered
1879, c. 277.
Boosac Valley Street Railway Company, North Adams. Organiza-
tion certified April 7, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Hopedale Elastic Goods Company, Hopedale. Organization certified
March 25, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hopedale Machine Company, Milford. Organization certified
December 2, 1867.
Hopedale Machine Screw Company, The, Hopedale. Organization
certified December 19, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hopeville Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied August 4, 1870. 1870, c. 224.
Hopewell Railroad Supply Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 13, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hopkinton Building Association, Hopkinton. Organization certified
March 30, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Horace Partridge Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 31, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Horn and Supply Company, The, Leominster. Organization certi-
fied July 1, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Horn Pond Branch Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1852,
c. 192.
Horner Machine Company, The, Holyoke. Organization certified
March 6, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Horton Manufacturing Company,' The, Reading. Organization cer-
tified May 26, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106. Change of name
1891, c. 360.
Honsatonic Water Company, Great Barrington. Chartered 1884,
c. 262. 1887, c. 62.
House Furnishing Co-operative Company, The, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified May 5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Howard Brothers Maufacturing Company, The, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified May 15, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Howard Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 20, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Howe and Pollard Company, Hubbardston. Organization certified
August 10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Howe Lumber Company, The, Lowell. Organization certified March
8, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Howland Mills Corporation, New Bedford. Organization certified
May 81, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hoxie Mineral Soap Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
May 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
72 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Hub Webbing Company, Boston. Organization certified December
11, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Huber Printing Press Company, Taunton. Organization certified
June 5, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hubley Manufacturing and Supply Company, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified August 27, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hull Electric Light and Power Company, Hull. Organization certi-
fied April 13, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hull Street Railway Company, Hull. Chartered 1887, c. 297.
Hunt Manufacturing Company, Westborough. Organization certi-
fied April 10, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hunt-Spiller Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified May 31, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hunt's Life Saving Gun Company, Weymouth. Organization certi-
fied February 26, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hurlbut Paper Manufacturing Company, Lee. Organization certified
May 7, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hurlbut Stationery Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified July
25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hutchins Machine Company, Worcester. Organization certified
June 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hutchins Narrow Fabric Co., Worcester. Organization certified
March 14, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hyannisport Hotel Company, Boston. Organization certified April
11, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hyde Manufacturing Company, Southbridge. Organization certified
August 4, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Hyde Park Company, Hyde Park. Organization certified May 2,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hyde Park Electric Light Company, Hyde Park. Organization cer-
tified March 26, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Hyde Park Water Company, Hyde Park. Chartered 1884, c. 91.
Hydraulic Manufacturing Company, The, Worcester. Organization
certified September 28, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ice, Bait and Fish Company, The, Gloucester. Organization certi-
fied December 1, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Imperial Metal Card Company, Boston. Organization certified June
3, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Improved Dwellings Association, Boston. Chartered 1885, c. 128.
Improved Dwellings Association of Springfield, Springfield. Char-
tered 1886, c. 268.
India Alkali Works, Boston. Organization certified January 20,
1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 73
India Drug Company, Boston. Organization certiGed May 28, 1888.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Indian Orchard Company, Springfield. Organization certified March
24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Industrial Co-operative Association, New Bedford. Organization
certified January 29, 1876.
Ingalls Boot and Shoe Corporation, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified June 1, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Instant Freezer Company, The, Fitchburg. Organization certified
July 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Intercontinental Railway (of Mexico) Company, Limited, Mexico.
Organization certified October 15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 112.
International Telegraph Company, Boston. Chartered 1866, c. 251.
Leased to the Western Union Telegraph Company.
International Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1879, c. 152.
Interstate Law Company, Boston. Organization certified December
31, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Investor Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified No-
vember 11, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Investor Security Company of Boston, The, Boston. Organization
certiGed January 6, 1894. Pub. Scat., c. 106.
Ipswich Building Association, The, Ipswich. Organization certified
July 15, 1893. Pub. Stat. c. 106.
Ipswich Co-operative Creamery Company, The, Ipswich. Organiza-
tion certified April 24, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ipswich Gas Light Company, Ipswich. Organization certified Octo-
ber 26, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Ipswich Mills, Ipswich and Boston. Organization certified January
20, 18G8.
Isaac Prouty & Co., Incorporated, Spencer. Organization certified
August 15, 1894. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
Ivers and Pond Piano Company, Boston. Organization certified
October '22, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
J. A. Cnmmings Printing Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified July 16, 1887. Pub. Stat-, c. 106.
J. B. Parker Machine Company, Clinton. Organization certified
March 10, 1875.
J. Barker and Brothers Manufacturing Company, The, Pittsfield.
Organization certified October 16, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. C. Ayer Company, Lowell. Organization certified October 16,
1877. 1870, c. 224.
J. C. Lockett Crimping Machine Company. Brockton. Orgauiza-
tioo certified November 9, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
74 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
J. E. Wesson Shoe Company, Worcester. Organization certified
January 15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. F. Bumstead Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
November 28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. G. Boutelle Company, Pepperell. Organization certified Decern*
ber 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. 6. Bridge Company, Boston. Organization certified December
30, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. G. Phinney Counter Co., Stonghton. Organization certified
March 21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. H. Conant Company, Boston. Organization certified May 6,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. H. Cunningham Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. H. Foss Company, The, Fitchburg. Organization certified
September 28, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. H. Home and Sons Company, The, Lawrence. Organization cer-
tified May 19, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. H. Lockey Piano-case Company, Leominster. Organization cer-
tified October 25, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. H. Rogers Carriage Company, Springfield. Organization certified
January 30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. H. Whitney Company, The, Boston. Organization certified June
26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. J. Warren Company, Boston. Organization certified March 17,
1883. 1888, c. 26.
J. L. and T. D. Peck Manufacturing Company, Pittsfield. Organ-
ization certified February 12, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. N. Pike Company, Lynn. Organization certified February 12,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J, R. Torrey Razor Company, Worcester. Organization certified
March 13, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
J. S. Carr Company, Springfield. Organization certified May 2,
1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. S. Nelson & Son Shoe Company, Grafton. Organization certified
May 10, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. S. Turner Company, The, Rockland. Organization certified April
10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. Stevens Arms and Tool Company, The, Chicopee. Organization
certified January 29, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. y. Abbott Manufacturing Company, Dedham. Organization cer-
tified December 31, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. W. Bailey & Sons Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 6, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 75
J. W, Kennan Company, Boston. Organization certified November
6, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
J. W. Richardson Shoe Company, The, Reading. Organization cer-
tified October 18, 1892. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Jablochkoff Electric Lighting Company of New England, Boston.
Organization certified December 12, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Jackson Patent Shell Roll Corporation, The, Fitchburg. Organiza-
tion certified July 25, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jamaica Plain Gas Light Company, West Roxbury. Chartered 1853,
c. 63.
Jamaica Plain Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1893, c. 229.
Jamaica Pond Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified August
22, 1872.
James Hunter Machine Company, The, North Adams. Organization
certified March 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
James Ramage Paper Company, Monroe. Organization certified
October 2, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
James Russell Boiler Works Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified July 15, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jas. W. Gifford Company, Attleborough. Organization certified
March 5, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jameson and Knowles Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 4, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jamesville Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified December 23, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jarvis Engineering Company, Boston. Organization certified June
29, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jenkins Manufacturing Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
July 31, 1875. 1870, c. 224.
Jenkins Rubber Company, Holyoke. Organization certified Septem-
ber 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jenney Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified August 2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jesse Eddy Manufacturing Company, The, Fall River. Organiza-
tion certified July 24, 1886. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Jewett Lumber Company, Boston. Organization certified December
30, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Jewett Piano Company, Leominster. Organization certified April
14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John C. DeLaney Moulding Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified December 31, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John C. Maclnnes Company, Worcester. Organization certified
July 28, 1892, Pub. Stat., c. 106.
76 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
John Cavanagh and Son Building Moving Co., The, Boston. Or-
ganization certified December 26, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John E. Brown Manufacturing Company, The, Holyoke. Organiza-
tion certified February 15, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John F. Fowkes Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization
certified October 30, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John Farquhar's Sons, Incorporated, Boston. Organization certified
January 8, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John L. Whiting and Son Company, Boston. Organization certified
July 28, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John P. Lovell Arms Company, Boston. Organization certified
March 11, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John P. Squire and Company, Corporation, Boston. Organization
certified April 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 107,
John Pilling Shoe Company, Lowell. Organization certified Febru-
ary 8, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John Rhodes Warp Company, Millbury. Organization certified May
29, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John Robbins Manufacturing Co., The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified June 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John Roberts and Son Company, Waltham. Organization certified
December 30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John Russell Cutlery Company, Montague. Organization certified
June 13, 1873.
John S. Wolfe Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization certified
February 24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
John Wales Company, Boston. Organization certified December 28,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Johnson Manufacturing Company, North Adams. Organization cer-
tified September 8, 1873.
Joseph Breck & Sons' Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
January 14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Joseph T. Wood Company, West Brookfield. Organization certified
December 18, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Journal Newspaper Company, Boston. Chartered 1857, c. 201.
Journal Printing Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
November 1, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Judd Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified December
18, 1890. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Junction Water Company, Pittsfield. Chartered 1887, c. 73.
Kabley Foundry Company, Worcester. Organization certified De-
cember 14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 77
Eatama Land Company, Edgartown. Chartered 1872, c. 155. 1882,
c. 99.
Kehew-Bradley Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
March 24, 1894. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Keith Paper Company, Montague. Organization certified September
19, 1871.
Kelsey Manufacturing Company, The, Salem. Organization certified
February 24, 1891. Pub. Sut., c. 106.
Kennedy and Sullivan Manufacturing Company, Holyoke. Organ-
ization certified February 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Kensett Lath Company, The, Boston. Organization certified March
19, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Kibbe Brothers Company, Springfield. Organization certified July
18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Kilburn, Lincoln and Company, Fall River. Organization certified
January 28, 1869.
Kimball Brothers Company, Boston. Organization certified February
3, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
Kimball Factory Company, The, Westborough. Organization certi-
fied June 8, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
King Philip Mills, Fall River. Organization certified September 15,
1871.
Kinsley Express Company, Boston. Organization certified Novem-
ber 18, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Kinsley Iron and Machine Company, Canton. Chartered 1854, c.
385.
Kilson Machine Company, Lowell. Organization certified July 2,
1874.
Knights of Labor Co-operative Boot and Shoe Association, The,
Worcester. Organization certified June 24, 1887. Pub. Stat.,
c. 106.
Knitted Fabrics Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
November 16, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Knitted Mattress Company, Canton. Organization certified August
3, 1880. 1870, c. 224 ; 1886, c. 84.
Knowles Freeman Fish Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 10, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Knowles Loom Works, Worcester. Organization ceitified December
18, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Kdox Hill Water Company, Palmer. Organized September 1, 1886.
Pub. Stot., c. 110.
Konkapot Valley Railroad Company, New Marlborough. Chartered
ltt92, c. 297.
78 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Kuro Medicine Company, Boston. Organization certified January
17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
L. A. May Company, The, Lynn. Organization certified February
I, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
L. D. Thayer Manufacturing Company, The, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified March 7, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
L. Hardy Company, Worcester. Organization certified August 23,
1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
L. L. Brown Paper Company, Adams. Organization certified June
II, 1873.
L. M. Harris Manufacturing Company, West Boylston. Organiza-
tion certified February 13, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
L. Sprague Company, Lawrence. Organization certified November
14, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
L. W. Pond Machine Company, Worcester. Organization certified
July 12, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
La Sociale Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 11, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
La Soci^^t^ de Publications Francaises des Etats Unis, Lowell. Or-
ganization certified February 25, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lady Grey Perfumery Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 17, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lagoon Pond Company, in Dukes County, Tisbury. Chartered
1857, c. 87.
Lake Williams Ice Company, The, Marlborough. Organization cer-
tified May 11, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lakeside Manufacturing Company, Leicester. Organization certified
December 27, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lakeview Printing Company, Framingham. Organization certified
March 27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lamb Knitting Machine Manufacturing Company, Chicopee. Organ-
ization certified January 21, 1868.
Lambeth Rope Company, New Bedford. Organization certified May
24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lamprey Boiler Furnace Mouth Protector Company, Cambridge.
Organization certified May 21, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lamson and Goodnow Manufacturing Company, Buckland. Char-
tered 1851, c. 312 ; 1853, c. 261 ; 1885, c. 349.
Lamson Show Case Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
^ January 15, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lancaster Manufacturing Company, Fitchburg. Organization cer-
tified March 17, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lancaster Mills, Clinton. Chartered 1844, c. 20.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 79
Lancaster Slate Company, Boston. Organization certified December
22, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Lane's Cove Pier Company j Gloucester. Chartered 1828. 1827,
c. 76.
Lanesville Granite Company, Rockport. Organization certified June
11, 1873.
Lang &. Jacobs Company, Boston. Organization certified October
31, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Langdon Mitre Box Company, Erving. Organization certified Octo-
ber 21, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Laurel Lake Mills, Fall River. Organization certified November 2,
1881. 1870,0.224.
Lawrence Duck Company, Lawrence. Chartered 1853, c. 81.
Lawrence Equitable Co-operative Society, Lawrence. Organization
certified June 16, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lawrence Flyer and Spindle Works, Lawrence. Organization certi-
fied August 6, 1867.
Lawrence Gas Company, Lawrence. Chartered 1849, c. 17.
Lawrence Ice Company, Lawrence. Organization certified April 26,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lawrence Improvement Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
September 14, 18U3. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Lawrence Line Company, Lawrence. Organization certified March
8, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Lawrence Lumber ('ompany, Lawrence. Organization certified Sep-
tember 22, 1868.
Lawrence Machine Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
October 1, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lawrence Manufacturing Company, Lowell. Chartered 1831, c. 5.
Lawrence Shuttle Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
March 27, 1885. Pub. Slat, c. 106.
Lawrence Spool and Bobbin Company, The, Lawrence. Organiza-
tion certified March 27, 1885. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Lawrence Supply Company, Lawrence. Organization certified May
«, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lawrence Trust Company, Lawrence. Chartered 1893, c. 248.
Lawyers Loan and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1890, c. 376.
Leach and Grant Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
March 21, 1891. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Leavitt Machine Co., The, Orange. Organization certified October
22, 1890. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Lee Creamery Co-operative Association, The, Lee. Organization
certified November 10, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
80 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Lee Electric Company, Lee. Organization certified November 24,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Leicester Electric Company, Leicester. Organization certified De-
cember 7, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Leicester Hotel Company, The, Leicester. Organization certified
October 8, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Leicester Water Power Company, Leicester. Chartered 1846, c. 46.
Lend A Hand Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 24, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lenox Electric Company, The, Lenox. Organization certified
August 22, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lenox Water Company, Lenox. Chartered 1874, c. 209.
Leominster Coal Company, Leominster. Organization certified Sep-
tember 9, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Leominster Electric Light and Power Company, The, Leominster.
Organization certified February 27, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Leominster Gas Light Company, Leominster. Organization certified
January 15, 1873.
Leominster Shirt Company, Leominster. Organization certified Feb-
ruary 11, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Leominster Worsted Company, Leominster. Organization certified
November 25, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lewis J. Bird Company, Boston. Organization certified March 25,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lewis Wharf Company, Boston. Chartered 1834, c. 115.
Lexington Buildings Association, Boston. Organization certified
May 25, 1874.
Lexington Gas Light Company, Lexington. Organization certified
December 4, 1874.
Lexington Print Works, The, Lexington. Chartered 1891, c. 247.
Lexington Water Company, Lexington. Chartered 1881, c. 267.
Liberty Masonic Association, Beverly. Chartered 1867, c. 283.
Liberty Square Warehouse Company, Boston. Chartered 1826.
1825, c. 61.
Library Bureau, Boston. Organization certified May 31, 1888.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lincoln Wharf Company, Boston. Chartered 1857, c. 81.
Linden Paper Co., The, Holyoke. Organization certified July 28,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Litchfield Shuttle Company, The, Southbridge. Organization certi-
fied March 29, 1878. 1879, c. 9.
Liverpool Wharf, The Proprietors of, Boston. Chartered 1816,
c. 23.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 81
Locks and Canals on Merrimack River, Proprietors of the, Lowell.
Chartered 1792. 1846, c. 48.
Locks Pond Reservoir Company, Montague. Chartered 1885, c. 74.
Lockwood Manafacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified July 14, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Logan, Swift and Brigham Envelope Company, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified March 10, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Long Pond Fishing Company in Yarmouth. Chartered 1842, c. 75.
1881, c. 46.
Loring and Blake Organ Company, Worcester. Organization cei-ti-
fied November 27, 1868.
Lovell Arms and Cycle Company, Worcester. Organization certified
February 18, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lovett, Hai-t and Phipps Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 12, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Low Art Tile Company, The, Chelsea. Organization certified August
28, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lowell a.nd Andover Railroad Company, Lowell and Andover. Or-
ganization certified February 5, 1873, under 1872, c. 5^.
Lowell and Suburban Street Railway Company, Lowell. Chartered
1863, c. 172. 1890, c. 163. Approved April 25, 1891.
Lowell Bleachery, Boston and Lowell. Chartered 1833, c. 2.
Lowell Co-operative Association, Sovereigns of Industry, Lowell.
Oi^anization certified March 9, 1876.
Lowell Co-operative Milk Association, Lowell. Organization certi-
fied November 24, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lowell Courier Publishing Company, The, Lowell. Organization
certified August 10, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lowell Electric Light Corporation, The, Lowell. Organization cer-
tified December 30, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Lowell Gas Light Company, Lowell. Chartered 1849, c. 234.
Lowell Hosiery Company, Lowell. Chartered 1869, c. 326.
Lowell Iron Company, Lowell. Organization certified February 28,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lowell Land Company, Lowell. Chartered 1888, c. 218.
Lowell, Lawrence and Haverhill Street Railway Company, Lowell.
Chartered 1892, c. 218.
I^well Machine Shop, Lowell. Chartered 1845, c. 10.
Lowell Manafacturing Company, Lowell. Chartered 1828. 1827,
C.47.
Lowell Trust Company, Lowell. Chartered 1890, c. 323.
Lowell Wadding and Paper Company, Lowell. Organization certified
August 31, 1870. 1870, c. 224.
>^
82 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Lowell Waste Company, Lowell. Organization certified July 1,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ludlow Cordage Company, Ludlow. Organization certified February
4, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ludlow Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organization certified
May 8, 1869.
*
Lyman and Kellogg Co., Hoi yoke. Organization certified July 14,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lyman Mills^ Boston and Holyoke. Chartered 1854, c. 82.
Lyman Smith's Sons Company, Norwood. Organization certified
June 30, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lynn and Boston Railroad Company, Lynn. Chartered 1859, c. 202.
Lynn Aqueduct Company, Lynn. Chartered 1865, c. 132.
Lynn Box Company, Lynn. Organization certified September 10,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lynn District Messenger and Telegraph Company, The, Lynn. Or-
ganization certified March 11, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lynn Express Company, Lynn. Organization certified April 18,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lynn Foundry and Manufacturing Company, The, Lynn. Organiza-
tion certified November 16, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lynn Gas and Electric Company, Lynn. Organization certified
August 28, 1852. 1873, c. 112 ; 1888, c. 252.
Lynn Ice Company, The, Lynn. Organization certified May 28,
1879. 1870, c. 224.
Lynn Market House Company, Lynn. Chartered 1870, c. 167.
Lynn Pearl Button Company, The, Lynn. Organization certified
October 4, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lynn Press Publishing Company, Lynn. Organization certified
October 23, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lynn Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Lynn. Chartered 1887, c.
195.
Lyons and Alexander Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
April 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Lyons Granite Company, Quincy. Organization certified February
15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
M. E. Shattuck Cigar and Tobacco Company, The, Worcester. Or-
ganization certified August 18, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
M. M. Rhodes & Sons Co., Taunton. Organization certified October
31, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
M. Robson Leather Company, Salem. Organization certified May
16, 1894. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 83
M. Strickland, Incorporated, Boston. Organization certified January
13, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Macdonald Printing Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Magee Furnace Company, Boston. Organization certified March 6,
1868.
Magneso-Calcite Fire-Proof Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied September 1, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Magnolia Improvement Company, Boston. Chartered 1888, c. 245.
Maiden and Melrose Gas Light Company, Maiden. Chartered 1854,
c. 43. 1883, c. 205.
3Ia]den and Melrose Bailroad Company, Maiden, Chartered 1856,
c. 302.
Maiden Electric Company, The, Maiden. Organization certified
March 12, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Maiden Lumber Company, The, Maiden. Organization certified
December 28, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Maiden Mail Company, The, Maiden. Organization certified Novem-
ber 21, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Maiden, Melrose and Stoneham Street Railway Company. Chartered
1893, c. 427.
Maiden ^ews Company, The, Maiden. Organization certified June
20, 1893. Pub. Slat., c. 106.
Maiden Odd Fellows* Hall Association, Maiden. Chartered 1873,
c. 35.
Mansfield Co-operative Furnace Company, Mansfield. Organization
certified September 5, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Blanson Building Company, The, Framingham. Organization certi-
fied December 30, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Manufacturers' Engineering Company, Springfield. Organization
certified January 9, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Manufacturers' Gas Light Company, Fall River. Chartered 1880, c.
164.
Manufacturers' Gazette Publishing Company, Boston. Organization
certified May 25, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1884, c. 61.
Manufacturers' Trust Company, Holyoke. Chartered 1887, c. 224.
1888, c. 271.
Marblehead Building Association, Marblehead. Chartered 1890, c.
22.
Marblehead Gas and Electric Light Company, Marblehead. Char-
tered 1854, 0. 35. 1886, c. 225.
Marblehead Neck Club Stable Company, The, Marblehead. Organ-
ization certified June 9, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Marblehead Water Company, Marblehead. Chartered 1883, c. 163.
I
84 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Marlboro' Awl & Needle Co., Marlborough. Organization certified
April 1, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Marlborough Building Association, Marlborough. Chartered 1889,
c. 367.
Marlborough Electric Company, Marlborough. Organization certi-
fied February 15, 1886 ; Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1889, c. 138.
Marlborough Gas Light Company, Marlborough. Chartered 1865, c.
25. Confirmed June 15, 1872.
Marlborough Street Railway Company, Marlborough. Chartered
1888, c. 166.
Marlborough Times Publishing Company, Marlborough. Organiza-
tion certified June 26, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Marsbpee Manufacturing Company, Mashpee. Chartered 1867,
c. 41.
Marston and Converse Company, Boston. Organization certified
September 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Martha's Vineyard Railroad Company, Edgartown. Organization
certified June 17, 1874, under 1872, c. 53.
Mason and Hamlin Organ and Piano Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified June 12, 1868. Reorganized May 20, 1874. 1882,
c. 47.
Mason Machine Works, Taunton. Organization certified August 12,
1863.
Mason Regulator Company, Boston. Organization certified June 1,
1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Masonic Building Association, New Bedford. Organized June, 1861.
Massachusetts Cotton Mills, Lowell. Chartered 1839, c. 1.
Massachusetts Cremation Society, The, Worcester. Oi'ganization
certified January 15, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company, Boston. Char-
tered 1818. 1817, c. 180.
Massachusetts Loan and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1870,
c. 323. 1875, c. 16.
Massachusetts Manufacturing and Electrical Supply Company, Chel-
sea. Organization certified May 13, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Massachusetts Mills In Georgia, Boston. Organization certified
December 21, 1894. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Massachusetts Mohair Plush Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 14, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Massachusetts Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified December 21, 1872, under 1872, c. 375. 1881,
c. 280.
Massachusetts Publishing Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified August 17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895-] PUBLIC DOCUMENT No, 16. 85
Massachusetts Heal Estate Company, Lowell. Chartered 1892,
c. 343.
Massachasetts Screw Company, Hol3'oke. Organization certified
March 14, 1874.
Massachasetts Title Insurance Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified January 19, 1885. Pub. Stat.,c. 106, and Acts of 1884,
c. 180.
Massachusetts Wire Company, Maiden. Organization certified
December 10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Massaemet Yarn Mills, The, Colrain. Organization certified Febru-
ary 27, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
3Iassasoit Clothing Company, The, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified April 11, 1894. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
Massasoit Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organization cer-
tified February 2, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Massasoit Paper Manufactaring Company, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified November 22, 1853. 1870, c. 266.
Massasoit Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified Janu-
ary 26, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1889, c. 133.
Masten and Wells Fireworks Manufacturing Company, The, Boston.
Organization certified January 14, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mather & Winn Co., Leominster. Organization certified November
14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mattapan Deposit and Trust Company, South Boston. Chartered
1891, c. 169.
Mattapoisett Manufacturing Company, Mattapoisett. Organization
certified October 24, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mattapoisett Wharf Company, Mattapoisett. Chartered 1833,
c. 212.
Matthews Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified January 29, 1894. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Maverick Oil Company, Boston. Organization certified July 10,
1877. 1870, c. 224.
Maverick Wharf Company, Boston. Chartered 1853, c. 420.
Mawhinney Last Company, Worcester. Organization certified
December 16, 1893. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Mayall Rubber Company, Reading. Organization certified May 9,
1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Maybew Silk Company, Shelburne. Organization certified July 8,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Maynard-Gough Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
September 19, 1891. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Mayo Meat Company, Boston. Organization certified February 15,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
86 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
McCarty, Sheehy and Kendrick Company, Brockton. Organization
certified January 23, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
McCloud, Crane and Minter Company, Worcester. Organization
certified November 3, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Meadow Company, The, Longmeadow. Organization certified
February 23, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mechanics' Building Company, Framingham. Organization certified
March 7, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mechanics' Iron Foundry Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 15, 1882. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Mechanics' Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1868, c. 242.
Medfield Water Company, Medfield. Chartered 1892, c. 322.
Medford Manufacturing Company, The, Medford. Organization
certified August 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Medway Water Company, Medway. Chartered 1892, c. 335.
Meigs Elevated Railway Construction Company, The, Boston. Or-
ganization certified January 12, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mercantile Fire and IMarine Insurance Company, Boston. Chartered
February 11, 1823. 1882, c. 8.
Mercantile Law Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
October 12, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mercantile Loan and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1888,
c. 424.
Mercantile Wharf Corporation, The, Boston. Chartered 1826, c. 13.
Merchant Box and Cooperage Company, Gloucester. Organization
certified November 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Merchants' Co-operative Express Company of Lawrence, Lawrence.
Organization certified September 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Merchants* Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Chartered 1867,
c. 81.
Merchants" Steam Lighter Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 18, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Merchants' Woollen Company, Dedham. Organization certified
October 20, 1863.
Merrick Lumber Company, Holyoke. Organization certified April
14, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Merrick Thread Company, Holyoke. Organization certified January
28, 1869.
Merrill Dexter and Company Corporation, Boston. Organization
certified December 17, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Merrill-James Shoe Company, TCe, Ayer. Organization certified
December 18, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.3 PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 87
liemmac Chemical Company, Boston. Organization certified No-
vember 30, 1863.
Merrimack Clothing Company, The, Lowell. Organization certified
July 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Merrimac Hat Company, Amesbury. Organization certified July
24, 1856.
Merrimack Manufacturing Company, Lowell. Chartered 1822.
1821, c. 46.
Merrimac Paper Company, Lawrence. Organization certified June
10, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Merrimac River Towing Company, Newburyport. Organization cer-
tified May 23, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Merrimac Valley Steamboat Company, Haverhill. Organization cer-
tified December 30, 1879. 1880, c. 10.
Merrimac Wheel and Gear Company, Amesbury. Chartered 1848,
c. 184. 1888, c. 91.
Merry Mount Granite Company, Quincy. Organization certified
December 31, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Metacomet Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organization cer-
tified September 25, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Metallic Drawing Roll Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified July 10, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. lOG.
Methnen Company, Boston. Chartered 1822. 1821, c. 59.
Metropolitan Express Company, The, Boston. Organization certi-
fied October 30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Metropolitan Steamship Company, The, Boston. Organization certi-
fied December 10, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Metropolitan Stock Exchange, The, Boston. Organization certified
November 25, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Metropolitan Storage Warehouse Company, Cambridge. Organiza-
tion certified May 8, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mexican Central Railway Company, Limited. Organized February
25, 1880, under 1879, c. 274.
Meyers Putz Pomade Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
July 16, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
MiddleboroQgh Gas and Electric Company, Middleborough. Organ-
ization certified January 21, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Middleby Oven Company, Boston. Organization certified June 22,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Middlesex Aqueduct Corporation, Arlington. Organized October
21, 1799.
Uiddlesex Company, Lowell. Chartered 1830, c. 9.
88 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Middlesex Ice Company, Melrose. Organization certified May 20,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Middlesex Land Company, Cambridge. Chartered 1888, c. 332.
Middlesex Last Company, The, Maiden. Organization certified Jane
1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Middlesex Leather Company, Wobarn. Organization certified June
30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Middlesex Newspaper Company, Framingham. Organization certi-
fied August 31, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Middlesex Real Estate Association of Cambridge, Cambridge.
Chartered 1887, c. 247.
Middlesex Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Lowell. Chartered
1888, c. 421.
Milan Mining Company, Boston. Organization certified July 7,
1882. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Milford and Hopedale Street Railway Company, Hopedale. Char-
tered 1890, c. 182.
Milford and Woonsocket Railroad Company, Milford. Chartered
1855, c. 269.
Milford Electric Light and Power Company, Milford. Chartered
1886, c. 243.
Milford, Franklin and Providence Railroad Company, Franklin.
Organized April 21, 1882.
Milford Gas Light Company, Milford. Chartered 1854, c. 242.
Milford Moulded Counter Company, Milford. Organization certified
September 27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Milford Music Hall Company, Milford. Organization certified April
30, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Milford Pink Granite Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 12, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Milford Shoe Company, Milford. Organization certified June 20,
1889. Pub. Stat., c, 106.
Milford Water Company, Milford. Chartered 1881, c. 77.
Millay Last Company, Hudson. Organization certified July 13,
1898. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Millbury Electric Company, Millbury. Organization certified May
6, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Millbury, Sutton and Douglas Electric Railroad Company, Millbury.
Chartered 1893, c. 161.
Millbury Water Company, Millbury. Chartered 1893, c. 214 .
Miller Brothers & Co. Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
March 22, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 89
Miller's Falls Company, Erving. Organization certified February 14,
1873.
Miller's River Building Company, Athol. Organization certified
December 28, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Miller's River Manufacturing Company, Athol. Organization certi-
fied December 8, 1863.
Millis Water Company, Millis. Chartered 1892, c. 246.
Milton Bradley Company, Springfield. Organization certified Janu-
ary 31, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Milton Building Associates, Milton. Organization certified March
10, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Milton Light and Power Company, Milton. Organization certified
January 1, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Milton Water Company, Milton. Chartered 1888, c. 411.
Mitchell Manufacturing Company, The, Fitchburg. Organization
certified May 13, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mittineague Paper Company, West Springfield. Organization cer-
tified February 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Monarch Carbonating Company, Framingham. Organization certi-
fied March 15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Monarch Rubber Company, The, Brockton. Organization certified
December 26, 1893. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Monroe Carter Company, Southbridge. Organization certified April
2, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Monroe Meat Company, Boston. Organization certified January 9,
1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Monson Co-operative Creamery Association, Monson. Organization
certified January 10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Monson Woolen Company, Monson. Organization certified August
18, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Montngae City Rod Company, Montague. Organization certified
October 24, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Montague Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Montague. Or-
ganization certified March 27, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Montague Paper Company, Montague. Organization certified May
9, 1871.
Monte Pio Co-operative Association, New Bedford. Organization
certified April 10, 1890, Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Montello Co-operative Shoe Company, Brockton. Organization cer-
tified Febraary 15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Monument Mills, Great Barrington. Chartered 1850, c. 217.
Hoore & Wyman Elevator & Machine Works, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified Febraary 25, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
90 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Morgan Construction Company, Worcester. Organization certified
September 23, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Morgan Envelope Company, Sprinorfleid. Organization filed April
27, 1870. Reorganized Marcli^6, 1872. 1870, c. 224, § 12.
Morgan Spring Company, Worcester. Organization certified Novem-
ber 29, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Morning Mail Corporation, The, Lowell. Organization certified
August 7, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Morrell Liquor Cure Company, Westfield. Organization certified
November 30, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Morrill Brothers Company, Boston. Organization certified Septem-
ber 16, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Morrill Leather Company, Boston. Organization certified August 4,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Morrison Steamboat Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 12, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Morse Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization certi-
fied January 15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Morse Twist Drill and Machine Company, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified October tf, 1864.
Moulton Leather Company, Lynn. Organization certified January
6, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mount Hope Iron Company, East Bridgewater. Chartered 1850,
c. 28. 1855, 0. 156.
Mount Tom Sulphite Pulp Company, The, Northampton. Organiza-
tion certified November 2, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mount Washington Glass Company, New Bedford. Organization
certified August 11, 1876.
Mrs. C. H. King Company, Lynn. Organization certified November
18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Muddy Pond Company, Boston. Organization certified May 9, 1887.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mudge Shoe Company, Boston. Organization certified November
15, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Munroe Felt and Paper Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
July 12, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Murdock Parlor Grate Company, Carver. Organization certified
May 25, 1875. 1870, c. 224.
Murray Brothers Company, Lawrence. Organization certified March
2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Mutual District Messenger Company of Boston, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified January 2, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 91
Mainal Gas Light Company of West Springfield, The, West Spring-
field. Organization certified March 10, 1894. Pub. Stat.,
c. 106.
Mutual Union Telegraph Company of Massachusetts, The, Boston.
Organization certified August 23, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
N. D. Dodge & Bliss Co., Newburyport. Organization certified
August 18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
N. W. Turner Company, Boston. Organization certified September
7, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
N. Ward Company, Boston. Organization certified May 21^ 1881.
1870, c. 224.
Nahant Land Company, Nahant. Chartered 1875, c. 139. 1888, c.
66.
Nahant Steamboat Express Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied May 12, 1873.
Nantasket Beach Steamboat Company, Hingham. Organization cer-
tified June 13, 1881. 1870, c. 224; 1882, c. 831 ; 890, c. 7.
Nantucket Electric Light Company, Nantucket. Organization certi-
fied June 1, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Nantucket Electric Street Railway Company, Nantucket. Organiza-
tion certified March 21, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Nantucket Gas Light Company, Nantucket. Chartered 1854, c. 19.
Nantucket Railroad Company, Nantucket. Organized April 19, 1880.
Narragansett Mills, Fall River. Organization certified July 5, 1871.
Nashawannuck Manufacturing Company, Easthampton. Chartered
1850, c. 132.
Nashua, Acton and Boston Railroad Company, Acton. Chartered
1871, c. 175.
Nashua and Lowell Railroad Corporation, Lowell. Chartered 1836,
c. 249. 1881, c. 98.
Nashua Reservoir Company, Fitchburg. Chartered 1842, c. 58.
Nashua River Paper Company, Pepperell. Organization certified
July 27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Natick and Cochituate Street Railway Company, Natick. Organiza-
tion certified May 2, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Natick Citizen Printing Company, The, Natick. Organization cer-
tified March 23, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Natick Electric Company, Natick. Organization certified April 15,
1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Natick Gas Light Company, Natick. Organization certified March
16, 1875.
Natick Protective Union, Natick. Organization certified November
23, 1868. 1866, c- 290.
92 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
National Bell Telephone Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified March 13, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
National Coin Co., Boston. Organization certified October 12, 1893.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
National Construction Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 29, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
National Co-operative Alliance, The, Boston. Organization certified
April 18, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
National Dock and Warehouse Company, East Boston. Chartered
1865, c. 26.
National Fireworks Company, Boston. Organization certified August
26, 1887. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
National Home Building Company, Boston. Chartered 1889, c. 181.
National Manufacturing Company, The, Worcester. Organization
certified March 7, 1874.
National Mortgage and Debenture Company, Boston. Chartered
1886, c. 301.
National Needle Company, Springfield. Organization certified Octo-
ber 4, 1873.
National Papeterie Company, Springfield. Organization certified
January 15, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
National Plaster Company, The, Lowell. Organization certified
June 2, 1883. Pub. Slat, c. 106.
National Roller Chafe Iron Company, Med way. Organization certi-
fied June 3, 1893. Pub. Stat, c. 106. Change of name 1891,
c. 360.
National Shoe and Leather Exchange, The, Boston. Organization
certified April 14, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Naukeag Water Company, Ashburnham. Chartered 1883, c. 201.
Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company, Salem. Chartered 1839, c. 113.
Nemasket Mills, Taunton. Organization certified April 18, 1891.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Neograph Publishing .Company, Boston. Organization certified De-
cember 3, 1891. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Neponset Reservoir Company, East Walpole. Chartered 1845, c. 48.
Neptune Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified December 24, 1872. 1872, c. 375.
Neverslip Horseshoe Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 27, 1885. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
New Bedford Copper Company, New Bedford. Organization certi-
fied February 17, 1862.
New Bedford Cordage Company, New Bedford. Chartered 1846, c. 1.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 93
Kew Bedford Cotton Waste Corporation, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified April 30, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New Bedford Gas and Edison Light Company, New Bedford. Char-
tered 1850, c. 144. 1891, e. 46.
New Bedford Ice Company, The, New Bedford. Organization certi-
fied March 14, 1872.
New Bedford Improved Gold Cure Company, Incorporated, The,
New Bedford. Organization certifled April 16, 1894. Pub.
Stat., c. 106.
New Bedford Manufacturing Company, New Bedford. Organization
certified February 28, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New Bedford, Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket Steamboat Com-
pany, New Bedford. Chartered 1886, c. 8.
New Bedford Opera House Company, New Bedford. Organization
certified March 31, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New Bedford Real Estate Association, New Bedford. Chartered
1889, c. 26.
New Bedford Safe Deposit and Trust Company, New Bedford.
Chartered 1887, c. 42.
New Bedford Steam Coasting Corporation, New Bedford. Organi-
zation certified October 1, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New Bedford Street Transportation Company, New Bedford. Or-
ganization certified July 31, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New Bedford Tow Boat Corporation, New Bedford. Organization
certified May 10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New Boston Aqueduct Company, (South) Lancaster. Organized
March 11, 1826.
New Boston Music Hall, Boston. Organization certified December
30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England and New York Railroad Company. Chartered 1894,
c. 4G3.
New England and Savannah Steamship Company, The,, Boston. Or-
ganization certified August 19, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Awl and Needle Company, Medway. Organization
certified January 28, 1871.
New England Burglary Insurance Company, Boston. Chartered
1894, c. 77.
New England Despatch Company, Boston. Organization certified
March 23, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1887, c. 41.
New England Dredging Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 27, 1873.
New England Electric Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 20, 1886. Pub. SUt., c. 106.
94 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
New England Felt Rooflng Works, Boston. Organization certified
June 25, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Fibre Company, The, Gill. Organization certified
December 24, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Folding Box Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 7, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Iron & Hardware Association, Boston. Organization
certified May 12, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Lodge Associates, The, Cambridge. Chartered 1873,
c. 237.
New England Morocco Works, Boston. Organization certified Octo-
ber 2, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Navigation Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Night Lunch Wagon Company, Worcester. Organi-
zation ceitified July 20, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Paint Company, Boston. Organization certified Octo-
ber 28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Patent Fire Escape Company, Boston. Organization
certified March 17, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Printing Telegraph Company of Massachusetts, The,
Boston. Organization certified July 31, 1890. Pub. Stat., c.
106.
New England Provision and Grocery Company, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified February 21, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Publishing Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 20, 1875. 1870, c. 224.
New England Rattan Company, South Framingham. Organization
certified March 30, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Shoe Manufacturing Company, The, Lynn. Organiza-
tion certified February 27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Supply Company, Salem. Organization certified Sep-
tember 27, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Telegraph Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 7, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New England Telephone and Telegraph Company, New York.
New England Telephone and Telegraph Company of Massachusetts,
The, Boston. Organization certified May 17, 1888. Pub. Stat ,
c. 106.
New England Telephone Company, The, Boston. Organi^sation cer-
tified February 12, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
New England Trust Company, The, Boston. Chartered 1869, c. 182.
New Haven and Northampton Company, Westfield (and New Haven,
Conn.). Chartered 1862, c. 97.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 95
New Home Sewing Macbine Company, Orange. Organization certi-
fied August 2, 1869. 1882, c 8.
New London Northern Railroad Company, New London, Conn.
Chartered 1860, c. 38. 1869, c. 315.
New Nation Publishing Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified May 5, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
New Process Twist Drill Company, Taunton. Organization certified
December 1, 1888. Pub. Stat., c 106.
New Salem Co-operative Creamery Company, New Salem. Organ-
ization certified June 1, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
New York and Boston Despatch Express Company, Boston. Organ-
ization certified June 16, 1873.
New York and Boston Inland Railroad Company, Boston. Organ-
ization certified January 17, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 112; 1886,
c. 107 ; 1889, c. 425 ; 1891, c. 166.
New York and Massachusetts Railway Company, New York. 1887,
c 200; 1891, c. 145.
New York and New England Railroad Company, Boston. Name
given to Boston, Hartford and Erie Railroad Company, by 1873,
c. 289.
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company, New York.
Chartered 1872, c. 171.
Newbury Stable Company, Boston. Organization certified April 7,
1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Newbuiyport and Amesbury Horse Railroad Company, Newbury port.
Chartered 1864, c. 53. 1873, c. 49.
Newburyport Car Manufacturing Company, Newbury port. Organ-
ization certified December 6, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Newburyport Gas and Electric Company, Newburyport. Chartered
1850, c. 147. 1889, c. 96.
Newburyport Herald Company, The, Newburyport. Organization
certified November 29, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Newburyport Shoe Company, Newburyport. Organization certified
January 25, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Newburyport Water Company, Newburyport. Chartered 1880, c.
235.
Newell Brothers Manufacturing Company, The, Springfield. Organ-
ization certified March 22, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Newport Transfer Express Company, Boston. Organization certified
October 26, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
News Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified April 17,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Newton and Boston Street Railway Company, The, Newton. Organ-
ization certified March 11, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
96 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Newton and Watertown Gas Light Company, Watertown. Chartered
1854, c. 44.
Newton Centre Trust Company, Newton. Chartered 1894, c. 152.
Newton Chemical Company, The, Boston. Chartered 1825. 1824,
c. 42.
Newton Machine Company, Newton. Organization certified October
15, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Newton Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified May 6,
1876.
Newton Heal Estate Association of Newton, Newton. Chartered
1889, c. 149.
Newton Rubber Company, Newton. Organization certified August
16, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Newton Street Railway Company, Newton. Chartered 1886, c. 341,
Newtonville and Watertown Street Railway Company, Newton.
Organization certified May 29, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Newtonville Trust Company, Newton. Chartered 1894, c. 168.
Nickcrson & Mayo Company, Boston. Organization certified October
17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Nine Mile Pond Fishing Company, Barnstable. Chartered 1860,
c. 91.
Nockege Mills, Fitchburg. Organization certified February 24, 1893.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Nonantum Worsted Company, Newton. Organization certified April
19, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Nonotuck Paper Company, The, Holyoke. Organization certified
June 24, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Nonotuck Silk Company, Northampton. Organization certified
March 19, 1866.
Norfolk Suburban Street Railway Company, Dedham. Organization
certified June 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Norfolk Woolen Company, Franklin. Organization certified Sep-
tember 8, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Norman Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified May 11,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North Adams Gas Light Company, North Adams. Chartered 1864,
c. 57.
North Adams Manufacturing Company, Adams. Organization cer-
tified October 23, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
North American Insurance Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 24, 1872. 1872, c. 375.
North Andover Mills, North Andover. Chartered 1867, c. 197.
• 1868, c. 173.
1895.;\ PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 97
'North Atlantic Steamship CompaDy, The, Boston. Organization
certified April 20, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
^ortb Attleboroagh Gas Light Company, North Attleborough. Or-
ganization certified April 13, 1855.
North Attleborough Steam and Electiic Company, Attleboroagh.
OrgaDization certified April 2, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North Brookfield Co-operative Creamery Association, North Brook-
field. Organization certified March 17, 1885. Pub. Stat., c.
106.
North Brookfield Electric Co., North Brookfield. Organization cer-
tified January 26, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North Brookfield Railroad Company, North Brookfield. Organized
June 24, 1875, under 1872, c. 53. 1874, c. 372.
North Brookfield Shoe Company, North Brookfield. Organization
certified May 10, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North Dighton Co-operative Stove Company, Taunton. Organiza-
tion certified August 16, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North Easton Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Company, Easton. Or-
ganization certified February 28, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North End Street Railway Company, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified June 15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
North Essex Trust Company, Newburyport. Chartered 1891, c. 298.
North Shore Electric Company, The, Revere. Organization certified
March 20, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North Truro Cold Storage Co., Truro. Organization certified April
27, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
North Wobum Street Railroad Company, Woburn. Chartered 1866,
c. 108. 1869, c. 216. 1887, c. 29.
Northampton Cutlery Company, Northampton. Organization certi-
fied August 4, 1871.
Northampton Electric Lighting Company, Northampton. Organiza-
tion certified November 16, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Northampton Emery Wheel Company, The, Northampton. Organi-
zation certified July 12, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Northampton Gas Light Company, Northampton. Chartered 1853,
c. 59. 1869, c. 119.
Northampton Paper Box Company, The, Northampton. Organiza-
tion certified November 1, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Northampton Street Railway Company, Northampton. Chartered
1865, c. 128. 1873, c. 48.
Northfield Co-operative Creamery Association, Northfield. Organi-
zation certified April 16, 1885. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
Northfield Hotel Company, Northfield. Organization certified June
6, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
98 TAJJ: COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Norton Emery Wheel Company, Worcester. Organization certified
June 20, 18o5. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Norton Iron Company, Boston. Organization certified December 5,
1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Norwich and Worcester Railroad Company, Norwich, Conn. Char-
tered 1836, c. 204.
Norwood Engineering Co., Northampton. Organization certified
April 11, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Norwood Gas Light Company, Norwood. Organization certified Oc-
tober 26, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Norwood Press Company, Norwood. Organization certified January
24, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Novelty Paper Box Company, Hudson. Organization certified
August 1, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
O. C. White Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified May
15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
O. D. Pillsbury Company, Newbury. Organization certified March
28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
O. T. Rogers Granite Company, Quincy. Organization certified
April 9, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Oak Bluffs Land and Wharf Company, Edgartown, Chartered 1868,
c. 60.
Oak Grove Creamery Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
May 14, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Oak Hill Hotel Co., Bradford. Organization certified January 12,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Oak Island Grove Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
February 21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ocean Telegraph Company, Boston. Chartered 1869, c. 129.
Ocean Terminal Railroad Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 26, 1879. 1874, c. 372. 1884, c. 183.
Ocean Terminal Railroad Dock and Elevator Company, Boston.
Chartered 1881, c. 239. 1884, c. 183.
Odd Fellows* Hall Association, Boston. Chartered 1871, c. 45.
Odd Fellows* Hall Association of Lawrence, Lawrence. Chartered
1874, c 9.
Odd Fellows' Hall Association of South Weymouth, South Weymouth.
Organization certified March 3, 1881. 1870, c. 224 ; 1874, c. 375.
Odd Fellows* Hall in the city of Lowell, Proprietors of, Lowell.
Chartered 1871, c. 11.
Odorless Excavating Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 22, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.3 PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 99
Old Berkshire Mills Co., Dalton. Organization certified Jane 28,
1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Old Colony Machine Company, Plymouth. Organization certified
May 4, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Old Colony Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1862. 1872, c.
143.
Old Colony Steamboat Company, Boston. Chartered 1874, c. 143.
Old Colony Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1890, c. 288.
Old Colony Wharf Company, Boston. Chartered 1873, c. 244.
Old Corner Drug Store, The, Med ford. Organization certified No-
vember 12, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
"Old Corner" Wall Paper Company, Springfield. Organization
certified September 12, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Old Spain Co-operative Society, Weymouth. Organization certified
January 9, 1882. 1870, c. 224.
Oliver Ames and Sons Corporation, Easton. Organization certified
February 11, 1875.
Oliver Ditson Company, Boston. Organization certified February 9,
1889. Pub. Stat., o 106.
Olmsted and Tuttle Company, Chicopee. Organization certified July
27, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Oneko Mills Corporation, New Bedford. Organization certified
August 22, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Onset Bay Grove Association, Wareham. Chartered 1877, c. 98.
Onset Water Company, Wareham. Chartered 1892, c. 334.
Orange Electric Light Company, Orange. Organization certified
October 7, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Orange Furniture Company, Orange. Organization certified June 5,
1882. Pub. Stat, 106.
Orange Water Works, Orange. Chartered 1884, c. 167. 1887, c.
294.
Oriental Coal Oil Company, Charlestown. Organization certified
August 3, 1860.
Oriental Coffee House Company, Boston. Organization certified De-
cember 8, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Original Wyman Luncheon Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified November 7, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Orewell Mills, Fitchburg. Organization certified May 8, 1886.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Osbom Mills, Fall River. Organization certified February 1, 1872.
Otis Company, Ware. Chartered 1840, c. 3.
Owen Paper Company, Great Barrington. Organization certified
July 2, 1862.
100 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
P. Blodgett Co., Templeton. Organization certified October 17,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
P. H. Carpenter Company, The, Southbridge. Organization certified
June 29, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
P. P. Emory Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organization
certified November 3, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pacific Guano Company, Falmouth and Boston. Chartered 1867, c.
129.
Pacific Mills, Lawrence. Chartered 1850, c. 128.
Page Catering Company, Lawrence. Organization certified Novem-
ber 20, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Paige Carpenter Colburn Company, Southbridge. Organization cer-
tified February 7, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Paine Furniture Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 28, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pairpoint Manufacturing Company, The, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified July 3, 1880. 1870, -c. 224.
Palmer and Monson Electric Company, The, Palmer. Organization
certified June 15, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106. 1891, c. 360.
Palmer Carpet Manufacturing Company, Palmer. Organization cer-
tified March 27, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Palmer Water Company, Palmer. Chartered 1883, c. 171.
Palmer Wire Manufacturing Company, Palmer. Organization certi-
fied June 1, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Para Rubber Shoe Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 9, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Parker Brothers Company, Boston. Organization certified Septem-
ber 5, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Parkhill Manufacturing Company, Fitchburg. Organization certi-
fied December 31, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Parlor Pride Manufacturing Company, The, Middleborough. Organi-
zation certified February 10, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Parmenter Manufacturing Company, The, Brookfield. Organization
certified October 7, 1890. Pukx Stat., c. 106.
Parsons Paper Company, Holyoke. Organized October, 1853, under
1851, c. 133.
Parsons Paper Company, Number Two, Holyoke. Organization
certified March 28, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Paul Whitin Manufacturing Company, Northbridge. Organization
certified June 13, 1870. Gen. Stat., c. 61.
Peabody Mills, Newburyport. Organization certified May 7, 1868.
Peabody-Whitney Company, Boston. Organization certified Feb-
ruary 2, 1891. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 101
Pearl Street Association, The, Worcester. Organization certified
April 27, 1877.
Pearson Box and Moulding Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied April 17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pearson Cordage Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 15, 1873.
Pease Machine Tool Company, Worcester. Organization certified
March 28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Peck and Whipple Company, Westfield. Organization certified
January 2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Peet Valve Company, Boston. Organization certified August 12,
1868.
Peirce and Winn Company, Arlington. Organization certified No-
vember 25, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pemberton Company, Lawrence. Chartered 1860, c. 102.
Pemigewasset and Saco Land and Lumber Company, Boston. Or-
ganization certified July 14, 1873.
People's Building Association, Boston. Chartered 1893, c. 299.
People's Co-operative Association, Brookfield. Organization certi-
fied February 11, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
People's Electric Street Railway Company, The, Holyoke. Organi-
zation certified April 27, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
People's Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified May 1, 1875.
1870, c. 224.
People's Steamboat Company, Fall River. Organization certified
December 22, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
People's Store Company, The, Douglas. Organization certified Sep-
tember 19, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
People's Street Railway Company, Newburyport. Chartered 1892,
c. 220.
Pepperell Card and Paper Company, The, Pepperell. Organization
certified August 27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pepperell Spring Water Company, Pepperell. Organization certified
September 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Perkins Machine Company, Boston. Organization certified July 12,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pettee Machine Works, Newton. Organization certified September
22, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Phelps Publishing Company, Holyoke. Organization certified De-
cember 10, 1880. 1870, c 224.
Phenix Plate Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
May 2, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Phenix Printing Company, Springfield. Organization certified March
12, 1894. Fub. Stat., c. 106.
102 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Phillips Manufactaring Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified March 31, 1876.
Phillips Woolen Company, Adams. Organization certified January
26, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Phillipston Co-operative Creamery Company, The, Philllpston.
Organization certified February 24, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Phoenix Brewing Company, Lawrence. Chartered 1879, c. 121.
Phoenix Hall Association, Fairhaven. Organized March 4, 1853.
Phoenix Manufacturing Corporation, Taunton. Organization certi-
fied June 10, 1850.
Phoenix Rattan Company, The, Natick. Organization certified
November 17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pierce and Bushnell Manufacturing Company, New Bedford. Or-
ganization certified September 2, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pierce Construction Company, Leominster. Organization certified
January 13, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pierce Hardware Company, The, Taunton. Organization certified
January 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pierce Manufacturing Corporation, New Bedford. Organization cer-
tified March 3, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pierson Fruit and Produce Company, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified April 16, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pigeon Cove Co-operative Association, The, Rockport. Organiza-
tion certified February 10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pigeon Cove Harbor Company, Rockport. Chartered 1831. 1830,
c. 34.
Pigeon Hill Granite Company, Rockport. Organization certified
December 6, 1870. 1870, c. 224.
Pilgrim Fathers Hall Association, Lawrence. Organization certi-
fied July 29, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106, and 1889, c. 362.
Pilgrim Steamboat Company, Quincy. Organization certified De-
cember 26, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pinkham & Willis Company, Worcester. Organization certified
January 31, 1893. Pub. Static. 106.
Pittsfield and North Adams Railroad Corporation, Boston. Char-
tered 1842, c. 69. 1869, c. 407.
Pittsfield Brass Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified Decem-
ber 24, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pittsfield Coal Gas Company, Pittsfield Chartered 1853, c. 21.
Pittsfield Electric Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified July
24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pittsfield Electric Street Railway Company, Pittsfield. Organization
certified October 1, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 103
Filtafield Manufacturing Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization
certified March 16, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
PittBfield Steam Power Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization cer-
tified August 12, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pittsfield Transportation Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified
June 25, 1887. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Pleasant Valley Live Stock Association, The, Brimfield. Organiza-
tion certified February 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Plankett Woolen Company, Hinsdale. Organized March 1, 1861.
Plymouth and Kingston Street Railway Company, Plymouth. Or-
ganization certified February 27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Plymouth and Middleborough Railroad Company, Plymouth. Char-
tered 1890, c. 108.
Plymouth Cordage Company, Plymouth. Chartered 1824, c. 21.
Plymouth County Co-operative Creamery Company, Bridgowater.
Organization certified August 13, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Plymouth County Railroad Company, Weymouth. Chartered 1892,
c. 151.
Plymouth County Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Brockton.
Chartered 1892, c. 39«.
Plymouth Electric Light Company, Plymouth. Organization certi-
fied November 23, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Plymouth Foundry Company, Plymouth. Organization certified
May 26, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Plymouth Gas Light Company, Plymouth. Chartered 1853, c. 128.
Plymouth Mills, Plymouth. Chartered 1846, c. 176.
Plymouth Preserving Co., Plymouth. Organization certified Sep-
tember 21, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Plymouth Shoe Co., Plymouth. Organization certified August 20,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Plymouth Steamboat Company, Plymouth. Organization certiGed
November 14, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Plymouth Stove Company, Boston. Organization certified September
19, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Plymouth Woollen and Cotton Factory, The, Plymouth. Chartered
1814. 1813, c. 187.
Pocasset Manufacturing Company, The, Fall River. Chartered
1822. 1821, c. 61.
Point of Pines Company, Revere. Organization certified April 28,
1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pomeroy Mining Company, Richmond. Organization certified June
9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
104 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Pomeroy Woolen Company, Pittsfield. Organization certiOed Novem-
ber 18, 1892. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Pond Machine Tool Company, Worcester. Organization certified
January 27, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pope's Island Manufacturing Corporation, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified December 13, 1890. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Post Printing Company, Worcester. Organization certified February
16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Post Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified June 20,
1876.
Postal Telegraph-Cable Company, New York.
Potomska Mills Corporation, New Bedford. Organization certified
June 20, 1871.
Potter Drag and Chemical Corporation, Boston. Organization cer-
tified January 28, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Powell Planer Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
April 28, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Powow Hill Water Company, Amesbury and Salisbury. Chartered
1883, c. 161.
Pranor Educational Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
December 7, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Pranker Manufacturing Company, Saugus. Organization certified
May 19, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Pratt Manufacturing Company, Grafton. Organization certified
January 31, 1889. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Presbrey Stove Lining Company, Taunton. Organization certified
July 17, 1867.
Prescott Insurance Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 26, 1872. 1872, c. 375.
Preston Manufacturing Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
February 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Progressive Co-operative Association, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified June 16, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Prospect Worsted Mills, Lawrence. Organization certified March
17, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Prout Brothers' Granite Company, Quincy. Organization certified
July 1, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Prouty Wire Company, Charlton. Organization certified January 13,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Providence and Springfield Railroad Company, Rhode Island. 1891,
c. 387.
Providence and Worcester Railroad Company, Providence, R. I.
Chartered 1844, c. 89.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 105
ProYideDce, Ponagansett and Springfield Railroad Company. 1890,
c. 322. 1894, c. 347.
Providence Telephone Company of Massaclmsetts, Boston. Organ-
ization certified February 24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Providence, Webster and Springfield Railroad Company, Webster.
Organized March 23, 1882.
Provincetown Cold Storage Co., Provineetown. Organization certi-
fied June 2, 1893. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Puritan Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 20, 1893. Pub Stat., c. 106.
Puritan Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1892, c. 394. 1893, c.
267. Name changed from Granite Trust Company, by 1894,
c. 115.
Putnam and Sprague Company, Worcester. Organization certified
December 31, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106. 1891, c. 43.
Putnam Machine Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified De-
cember 4, 1856.
Putnam Nail Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 31, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Pyro-Febrin Company, The, Northampton. Organization certified
December 21, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Quaboag Steamboat Company, The, Brookfield. Organization certi-
fied October 13, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Queen Hotel Company, The, Beverly. Organization certified April
5, 1890. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Qniucy and Boston Street Railway Company, Quincy. Organization
certified August 24, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Quincy and Nantasket Steamboat Compauy, Boston. Organization
certified November 29, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Quincy Electric Freight Railway Company, Quincy. Chartered 1891,
c. 359.
Quincy Electric Light and Power Company, The, Quincy. Organ-
ization certified February 15, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Quincy Market Cold Storage Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied August 19, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Quincy Quarry Company, The, Quincy. Organization certified
May 19, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Qaiucy Street Railway Company, Quincy. Organization certified
April 13, 1888. Pub. Stat , c. 113.
Qaincy Water Company, Quincy. Chartered 1883, c. 162.
Qoiosigamond Co-operative Baking Company, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified April 12, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Quinsigamond Co-operative Meat Market, Worcester. Organization
certified August 11, 1893. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
106 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Quinsigamond Electric Power and Light Company, Worcester. Or-
ganization certified February 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Quinsigamond Lake Improvement Company, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified February 12, 1891. Pub Stat., c. 106.
Quinsigamond Lake Steamboat Company, The, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified June 20, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
E. A. McWhirr Company, The, Fall River. Organization certified
May 8, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
R. H. Smith Manufacturing Company, The, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified January 2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
R. Y. Russell Printing and Paper Box Company, Lynn. Organiza-
tion certified February 4, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rafter Ripley Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
June 12, 1893. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Randolph Power Company, The, Randolph. Organization certified
January 24, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rays Woollen Company, Franklin. Organization certified December
14, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Reading Electric Light and Power Company, Reading. Organiza-
tion certified July 31, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Reading Gas and Electric Company, Reading. Organization certified
May 2, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Reading Lyceum Hall Association, Reading. Chartered 1854,
c. 360.
Reading Masonic Temple (Corporation), Reading. Organization
certified March 18, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Reading Rubber Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization
certified August 17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Reading Water Company, Reading. Chartered 1885, c. 381.
Real Estate and Building Company, Boston. Chartered 1861, c. 22 ;
1880, c. 43 ; 1885, c. 93.
Real Estate Exchange and Auction Board, The, Boston. Chartered
1889, c. 153.
Real Estate Improvement Company of Haverhill, Haverhill. Char-
tered 1886, c. 111.
Record Dry Plate Company, Milton. Organization certified May 2,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Recording Instrument Company, Boston. Organization certified
March 17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Reed and Barton Corporation, Taunton. Organization certified
February 21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Reed and Curtis Machine Screw Company, Worcester. Organization
certified June 19, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106. '
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16. 107
Register Co-operative Printing Company, Yarmouth. Organization
certified AprU 15, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Renfrew Manufacturing Company (South) Adams. Chartered 1867,
c. 194.
Republican Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
March 22, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Revere Copper Company, Boston. Chartered 1828, c. 34.
Revere House, Proprietors of the, Boston. Chartered 1854, c. 58.
Revere Rubber Company, Chelsea. Organization certified March 9,
1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Revere Water Company, Revere. Chartered 1882, c. 142.
Reversible Collar Company, Boston. Organization certified June 7,
1866. 1869. c. 232.
Review Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified Novem-
ber 10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rhode Island and Massachusetts Railroad Company, Franklin. Or-
ganization certified September 26, 1876. 1874, c. 372.
Rice and GriflSn Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization
certified February 10, 1873. 1870, c. 224.
Rice & Lockwood Lumber Company, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified December 13, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rice, Barton and Fales Machine and Iron Company, Worcester.
Chartered 1867, c. 274.
Rice Kendall Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Novem-
ber 14, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Richard Borden Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organization
certified July 7, 1871.
Richard Briggs Companv, Boston. Organization certified January
23, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Richardson Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified January 28, 1870, under Gen. Stat., c. 61.
Richardson Piano Case Co., Leominster. Organization certified
December 29, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106. 1891, c. 360.
Richmond Iron Works, Richmond. Chartered 1842, c. 79.
Ridgway Furnace Company, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 16, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ripley Howland Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization
certified January 26, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Riverbank Improvement Company, Boston. Chartered 1890, c. 109.
Riverdale 311118, The, Great Barrington. Organization certified May
16, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Riverdale Woolen Company, The, Northbridge. Organization cer-
tified September 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
108 TAX COMMISSIONER'S' REPORT. [Jan.
Riverside Co-operative Association of Maynard, The, Maynard. Or-
ganization certified November 12, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Riverside Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified April
24, 1867.
Riverside Water Company, Gill, Chartered 1888, c. 241.
Robbins Anchor Tripper Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified February 26, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Robbins Kellogg Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified
November 26, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Roberts Iron Works Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
January 22, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Robeson Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1866, c. 32.
Robinson Bros. Shoe Company, Boston. Organization certified
September 5, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Robinson Iron Company, Plymouth. Organization certified August
27, 1868.
Robinson Printing Company, Boston. Organization certified August
6, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rockland and Abington Street Railway Company. Organization cer
tified August 13, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Rockland Company, Rockland. Organization certified May 5, 1885.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rockland Factory Building Association, Rockland. Chartered 1893,
c. 284.
Rockland Hotel Company, The, Hull. Organization certified May
14, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rockport Electric Street Railway Company, Rockport. Chartered
1893, c. 354.
Rockport Granite Company, of Massachusetts, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified February 2, 1865.
Rockport Water Company, Rockport. Chartered 1893, c. 281.
Rocky Meadow Company, Boston. Organization certified May 9,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rodney Hunt Machine Company, Orange. Organization certified
January 8, 1873. 1870, c. 224.
Rogers Osgood Hat Company, Palmer. Organization certified June
2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Roland T. Oakes Company, The, Holyoke. Organization certified
January 2, 1892 Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rotch Spinning Corporation, New Bedford. Organization certified
March 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rotch's Wharf Company, New Bedford. Chartered 1831. 1830,
c. 88.
18i)5,^ PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No, 16. 109
RouiUard Reid Company, Boston. Ors^anization certified October 6,
1891. Pub. Slat., c. 106.
Rome's Wbarf, Proprietors of, Boston. Chartered 1818. 1817,
c. 94.
Roxbnry Carpet Company, Boston. Organization certified March 7,
1859.
Roxbury Central Wharf, Boston. Chaitered 1841, c. 66. 1890,
c. 165.
Roxbury Gas Light Company, Boston. Chartered 1852, c. 198.
Roxbury Real Estate Association of Boston, Boston. Chartered
1890, c. 268.
Roxbury Stone Company, The, Boston. Organization certified May
10, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Royal Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
December 20, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Royal Steam Heater Co., Gardner. Organization certified June 11,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Royce Laundry Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
March 23, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rubber Footwear Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
April 23, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Roddy Thread Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
April 24, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Russell Mills, Plymouth. Chartered 1854, c. 214.
Russell Paper Company, Lawrence. Organization certified June 4,
1864.
Russia Cement Company, Gloucester. Organization certified Febru-
ary 3, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rust and Richardson Drug Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 27, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Rutland Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Rutland. Organ-
ization certified April 16, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106
S. A. Freeman Company, Boston. Organization certified January
4, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
S. A. Woods Machine Company, Boston. Organization certified
October 25, 1873.
S. Armstrong Company, The, Somerville. Organization certified
January 13, 1894. Pub. Stat., c 106.
S. Blackinton Woolen Company, Adams. Organization certified
December 26, 1876. 1870, c. 224.
S. Blaisdeli Jr , Company, The, Chicopee. Organization certified
November 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
S. H. Howe Shoe Company, The, Marlborough. Organization cer-
tified November 1, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
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1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. Ill
Samuel Ward Company, Boston. Organization certified June 23,
1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Samuel Winslow Skate Manufacturing Company, The, Worcester.
Organization certified April 21, 1886. Pub. SStat., c. 106.
Sander Musical Instrument Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified March 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanders and Barrows Clothing Company, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified March 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanders Building Corporation, The, Haverhill. Organization certi-
fied March 11, 1891.' Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sandy Bay Pier Company, The, Rockport. Chartered 1811. 1810,
c. 77.
Sanford Sawtelle Company, Worcester. Organization certified
November 10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanford Spinning Company, Fall River. Organization certified May
18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanford Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified January
14, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanitary Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 22, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
SauDders Cotton Mills, Grafton. Chartered 1848, c. 293.
Sawyer Leather Machinery Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified February 2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sawyer Spindle Company, Boston. Organization certified June 8,
1872.
Saxonville Mills, Boston. Organization certified March 7, 1859.
Scandis Co-operative Grocery Company, Fitchburg. Organization
certified March 2, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandia Granite Works, Quincy. Organization certified August 6,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandinavian Co-operative Drug Company, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified June 8, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandinavian Co-operative Grocery Union, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified April 22, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandinavian Co-operative Mercantile Company, The, Brockton.
Organization certified July 6, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scituate Water Company, Scituate. Chartered 1893, c. 891.
Sea View Hotel and Wharf Company, The, Cottage City. Organiza-
tion certified May 22, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Seaconnet Mills, Fall River. Organization certified March 7, 1884.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Security Associates, The, Worcester. Organization certified Sep-
tember 24, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
no TAX COMMISSIONER'S EEPOET. [Jan.
S. K. C. Specialty Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified No-
vember 10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
S. K. Edwards Hall Company, Southbridge. Organization certified
August 28, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
S. M. Howes Company, The, Boston. Organization certified March
20, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
S. N. & C. Russell Manufacturing Company, Pittsfield. Organiza-
tion certified December 28, 1885 Pub. Stat., c. 106.
S. R. Niles Advertising Agency, The, Boston. Organization certi-
fied May 11, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
S. S. Pierce Company, Boston. Organization certified March 16,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106
S. W. Card Manufacturing Company, Mansfield. Organization cer-
tified March 2, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
S. Worthington Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
May 5, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sagamore Manufacturing Company, Fall River. Organization cer-
tified November 10, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Salem and South Danvers Oil Company, Salem. Organization certi-
fied November 14, 1855.
Salem, Beverly and Danvers Towboat Company, The, Danvers.
Organization certified June 13, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Salem Building Association, The, Salem. Organization certified
January 8, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Salem Commercial School Incorporated, Salem. Organization certi-
fied July 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Salem Electric Lighting Company, The, Salem. Organization certi-
fied January 30, 1882. 1870, c. 224.
Salem Gas Light Company, Salem. Chartered 1847, c. 67.
Salem Lead Company, Salem. Chartered 1868, c. 5.
Salem Marine Insurance Company, Salem. Chartered 1856, c. 5.
Salem Mechanic Hall Corporation, Salem. Chartered 1839, c. 40.
1857, c. 279 ; 1870, c. 102.
Salem Press Publishing and Printing Company, The, Salem. Organ-
ization certified April 12, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Salem Storage Warehouse Company, The, Salem. Organization
certified August 31, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Salem Waste Company, The, Salem. Organization certified June
12, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Salisbury Beach Plank Road Company, Salisbury. Chartered 1865,
c. 172. 1888, c. 208.
Samson Cordage Works, Boston. Organization certified July 3,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. Ill
Samnel Ward Company, Boston. Organization certified June 23,
1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Samuel Winslow Skate Manufacturing Company, The, Worcester.
Organization certified April 21, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sander Musical Instrument Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified March 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanders and Barrows Clothing Company, New Bedford. Organiza-
tion certified March 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanders Building Corporation, The, Haverhill. Organization certi-
fied March 11, 1891.' Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sandy Bay Pier Company, The, Rockport. Chartered 1811. 1810,
C. 4 /.
Sanford Sawtelle Company, Worcester. Organization certified
November 10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanford Spinning Company, Fall River. Organization certified May
18, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sanfoi*d Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified January
14, 1888. Pub. Slat., c. 106.
Sanitary Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 22, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Saunders Cotton Mills, Grafton. Chartered 1848, c. 293.
Sawyer Leather Machinery Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified February 2, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sawyer Spindle Company, Boston. Organization certified June 8,
1872.
Saxonville Mills, Boston. Organization certified March 7, 1859.
Scandia Co-operative Grocery Company, Fitchburg. Organization
certified March 2, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandia Granite Works, Quincy. Organization certified August 6,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandinavian Co-operative Drug Company, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified June 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandinavian Co-operative Grocery Union, Worcester. Organiza-
tion certified April 22, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scandinavian Co-operative Mercantile Company, The, Brockton.
Organization certified July 6, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Scitiiate Water Company, Scituate. Chartered 1893, c. 391.
Sea View Hotel and Wharf Company, The, Cottage City. Organiza-
tion certified May 22, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Seaoonnet Mills, Fall Hiver. Organization certified March 7, 1884.
Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Security Associates, The, Worcester. Organization certified Sep-
tember 24, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
112 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Security Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Lynn. Chartered 1890,
0. 212.
Security Safe Deposit Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 10, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Sewall and Day Cordage Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 9, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Sewing Machine Supplies Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified October 14, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Seymour Knapp-Warren Company, Wrentham. Organization certi-
fied August 29, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106. 1891, c. 360.
Shady Hill Nursery Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
January 20, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Shannon Manufacturing Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
September 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Shapleigh Coffee Company, Boston. Organization certified Decem-
ber 26, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sharon Water Company, Sharon. Chartered 1883, c. 177.
Shaw Leather Company, The, Woburn. Organization certified
February 26, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Shaw Stocking Company, Lowell. Organization certified October 16,
1877. 1870, c. 224.
Shelburne Falls Co-operative Creamery Association, Buckland. Or-
ganization certified November 19, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Shelley Manufacturing Company, Watertown. Organization certified
May 28, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Shorey Spring Bed and Shade Roller Company, The, Lowell. Or-
ganization certified April 21, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Shove Mills, Fall River, Organization certified April 2, 1872.
Shreve, Crump and Low Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 5, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Siasconset Street Railway Company, Nantucket. Organization cer-
tified August 1, 1890. 1893, c. 317.
Sigsbee Manufacturing Company, The, Ayer. Organization certified
June 6, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Silver Grill Caf6 Company of Boston, Boston. Organization certi-
fied May 1, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Silver Lake Company, Newton. Confirmation of organization under
Pub. Stat., c. 106, §§ 22, 80, filed November 15, 1887.
Simonds Manufacturing Company, Fitchburg. Chartered 1869, c.
48. Confirmed under 1874, c. 349, § 2, November 29, 1878.
Simonds Rolling-Machine Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 4, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 113
Simpaon Spring Company, Boston. Organization certified December
24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Simpson's Patent Dry Dock Company, Boston. Chartered 1856,
c. 16.
Singapore Rattan Company, The, Framingham. Organization cer-
tified December 11, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Slngletary Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Millbury. Or-
ganization certified April 28, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Skillings, Whitneys and Barnes Lumber Company, Boston. Organi-
zation certified September 27, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Slade Mills, Fall River. Organization certified June 14, 1871.
Slater Engine Company, The, Warren. Organization certified De-
cember 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Slater Woolen Company, Webster. Organization certified February
19, 1866.
Smith American Organ and Piano Company, Boston. Organization
certified January 10, 1871. 1870, c. 224. 1887, c. 45.
Smith 4& Anthony Company, Boston. Organization certified April
15, 1879. 1870, c. 224. 1891, c. 860.
Smith and Dove Manufacturing Company, Andover. Organization
certified June 28, 1864.
Smith & Stoughton Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
February 8, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Smith and White Manufacturing Company, Holyoke. Organization
certified November 17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Smith & Winchester Company, Boston. Organization certified
January 1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Smith Carleton Iron Co., Boston. Organization certified August 22,
1889. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Smitli-Foster Shoe Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 8, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
■
Smith-Green Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
January 17, 1«94. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Smith Heating and Ventilating Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified February 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Smith McCusker. Company, Boston. Organization certified April 12,
1894. Pub. Sut., c. 106.
Smith Paper Company, Lee. Organization certified January 10,
1866.
Smith, Wilson and Sears Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization
certified November 6, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Somerset Shoe Company, Somerset. Organization certified February
25, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
114 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Somerset Stove Foundry Company, Somerset. Organization certified
October 8, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Somerville Desk Company, The, Somerville. Organization certified
May 15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Somerville Electric Light Company, The, Somerville. Organization
certified February 21, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Somerville Horse Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1857, c.
250.
Somerville Journal Company, Somerville. Organization certified
May 27, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Somen'ille Trust Company, Somerville. Chartered 1891, c. 346.
Somerville Union Hall Company, Somerville. Chartered 1869, c.
177.
Sonora Railway Company, Limited. Organization certified May 1,
1879. 1879, c. 274.
Soule Piano & Organ Investment Company, Taunton. Organization
certified February 14, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
South Abington Shoe Factory Company, South Abington. Chartered
1885, c. 112.
South Bay Company, Boston. Chartered 1853, c. 344.
South Bay Improvement Company, Boston. Chartered 1877, c. 50.
South Bay Teaming Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
May 15, 1890. Pub. Stat., q. 106.
South Boston Building Association, South Boston. Chartered 1890,
c. 269.
South Boston Gas Light Company, South Boston. Chartered 1852,
c. 103.
South Congregational Meeting House in Lowell, Proprietors of the,
Lowell. Chartered 1831. 1830, c. 123.
South Deerfield Water Company, Deerfield. Chartered 1894, c. 369.
South Hadley Falls Electric Light Company, The, South Hadley.
Organization certified December 13, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
South Middlesex Street Railway Company, Natick. Organization
certified August 10, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 113. Name changed
from Natick Electric Street Railway Company, November 22,
1894. 1893, c. 346.
South Reading Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 28, 1854.
South Reading Mechanic and Agricultural Institution, Wakefield.
Chartered 1833, c. 94.
South Sea Cranberry Company, The, Yarmouth. Organization cer-
tified June 29, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 115
South Truro Fish Weir Company, Truro. Organization certifled
March 21, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Soath Well fleet Cranberry Association, Wellfleet. Organization cer-
tified November 14, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sooth Weymouth Shoe Company, Weymouth. Organization certified
May 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Southbridge Gas and Electric Company, Southbridge. Organization
certified April 21, 1871. 1890, c. 14.
Southbridge Optical Company, Southbridge. Organization certified
March 14, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Southbridge Printing Company, Soutbbri<1ge. Organization certified
December 31, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Southbridge, Sturbridge and Brookfield Railroad Company. Organi-
zation certified May 3, 1892. Pub. Stat , c. 112.
Southbridge Water Supply Company, Southbridge. Chartered 1880,
c' 73.
Southern Berkshire Cheese Company, The, Great Barrington. Or-
ganization certified September 1, 1870, under Gen. Stat., c. 61.
Southern Massachusetts Telephone Company, The, New Bedford.
Organization certified February 17, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Southgate Woolen Company, Worcester. Organization certified June
28, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Soatbworth Company, West Springfield. Organization certified No-
vember 21, 1873.
Sovereigns' Co-operative Associaliion of Webster, Mass., Webster.
Oq^anization certified December 28, 1876.
Sparrell Print, The, Boston. Organization certified December 16,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Spaaiding Brothers Company, The, Townsend. Organization certi-
fied April 12, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Speirs Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization certified
January 23, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Spencer Gas Company, The, Spencer. Organization certified July
31, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Spencer Hotel Corporation, Spencer. Organization certified October
21, 1874.
Spencer Wire Company, Spencer. Organization certified May 5,
1876.
Sprague and Breed Coal Company, Lynn. Organization certified
March 31, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springdale Paper Company, Springfield. Organization certified
January 16, 1882. 1870, c. 224.
Springfield Brass Company, Springfield. Organization certified
April 1, 1890. Pub. Stat , o. 106.
116 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Springfield Coil Boiler Company, Springfield. Organization certified
July 12, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Co-operative Milk AssociatioD, The, Springfield. Organ-
ization certified March 21, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Door, Sash & Blind Company, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified August 12, 1891. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Springfield Drop Forging Company, Springfield. Organization
certified May 18, 1893. Pub. Slat., c. 106.
Springfield Envelope Company, The, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified May 8, 1886. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Springfield.
Chartered 1849, c. 135.
Springfield Foundry Company, Springfield. Organization certified
October 9, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Springfield Gas Light Company, Springfield. Chartered 1847; c. lo,
Springfield Glazed Paper Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified May 4, 1874.
Springfield Knitting Company, Springfield. Organization certified
May 16, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Lumber Company, Springfield. Organization certified
September 23, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Mountains Co-operative Creamery Association, Hampden.
Organization certified November ;21, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. lOG.
Springfield Narrow Fabric Company, Springfield. Organization cer-
tified April 8, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Planing and Moulding Mill Co., Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified January 3, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Printing and Binding Company, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified May 31, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Springfield. Char-
tered 1885, c. 343.
Springfield Steam Power Company, Springfield. Organization certi-
fied March 28, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Springfield Street Railway Company, Springfield. Chartered 1868,
c. 63 ; 1869, c. 113 ; 1873, c. 149.
Springfield Union Publishing Company, Springfield. Organization
certified June 24, 1892. Pub. Stat^ c. 106.
Springfield Waste Company, Springfield. Organization certified
March 24, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Springfield Weaving Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified July 23, 187«. 1870, c. 224.
Springfield Webbing Companv, Springfield. Organization certified
June 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No, 16. 117
Sprockett Car Wheel Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 19, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Spy Publiahing Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
May 4, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
St. Regis Leather Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
Jane 7, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stafford Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1871, c. 13.
Standard Brass Company, Cambridge. Organization certified May
•23, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Brick Company, The, Springfield. Organization certified
April 17, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Button Company, Springfield. Organization certified Feb«
ruary 10, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Cloth Meter Co., Newbury port. Organization certified
May 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Clothing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
June 8, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Cordage Company, Boston, Organization certified March
29, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Crockery and House Furnishing Company, The, Worcester.
Organization certified April 16, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Envelope Company, Springfield. Organization certified
April 7, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Fertilizer Company, Duxbury. Organization certified June
15, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Standard Furniture Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
January 23, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Horse Shoe Company, Wareham. Organization certified
December 16, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Measuring Machine Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified January 10, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Standard Oil-Cloth Company, Taunton. Organization certified April
8, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Paper Bag Company, Boston. Organization certified
March 27, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Publishing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
August 22, 1882. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Standard Rubber Corporation, Brockton. Organization certified
March 10, 1892. Pub. Stat., o. 106 ; 1891, c. 360.
Standard Thermometer Company, Peabody. Organization certified
December 1, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Taming Works, Cambridge. Organization certified No-
vember 28, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
118 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Standard Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified January
7, 1882. 1870, c. 224.
Standard Worsted Company, Tbe, r/>well. Organization certified
November 4, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standard Worated Company of Jjowell, Mass., The, Lowell. Organ-
ization certified October 22, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Standish Hall Company, Abington. Organization certified May 25,
1881. 1870, c. 224.
Standish Worsted Company, Plymouth. Organization certified May
13, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stanley Electric Manufacturing Company, The, Pittsfield. Organi-
zation certified December 26, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stanley Laboratory Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization certified
February 19, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stanley Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
September 25, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Staple Heeling Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Feb-
ruary 8, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Staples Coal Company, Taunton. Organization certified May 26,
1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Star Belting Company, Boston. Organization certified February 17,
1894. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Star Brass Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
March 16, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Star Clothing Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
February 20, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Star Foundry Company, Worcester. Organization certified March
29, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Star Mills Corporation, Middle borough. Organization certified June
3, 1887. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Star Worsted Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified Decem-
ber 23, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
State Safe Deposit Company, Worcester. Organization certified
February 23, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
State Street Exchange, Boston. Chartered 1888, c 82.
State Street Safe Deposit and Trast Company, Boston. Chartered
1891,0.199.
Steel Wire Shank Company, Plymouth. Organization certified July
5, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Steimer and Moore Manufacturing Company, Westfield. Organiza-
tion certified November 6, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sterling Emery Wheel Company, Sterling. Organization certified
May 31, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stevens Linen Works, Dudley. Chartered 1867, c. 325.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 119
Stevens Manafaciaring Company, Fall River. Organization certified
June 3, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stevenson Manufacturing Company, Pittsfield. Organization certi-
fied May 17, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106. 1890, o. 397.
Stickney & Poor Spice Co., Boston. Organization certified April
15, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stiles Reservoir Company, Leicester. Chartered 1866, c. 232.
Stirling Mills, Lowell. Organization certified December 30, 1879.
1870, c. 224.
Stock bridge and Pittsfield Railroad Company. Stock bridge. Char-
tered 1847, c. 99.
Stockbridge Iron Company, Stockbridge. Chartered 1841, c. 19.
Stockbridge Water Company, Stockbridge. Chartered 1851, c. 210.
Stone & Downer Co., Boston. Organization certified January 29,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stoneham Gas and Electric Company, Stoncham. Organization
certified May 2, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stoneham Odd Fellows* Hall Association, Stoneham. Chartered
1872, c. 120.
Stonemetz Printers Machinery Company, Millbury. Organization
certified November 8, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stony Brook Railroad Corporation, Lowell. Chartered 1845, c. 251.
Stony Brook Water Power Company, Littleton and Westford.
Chartered 1866, c. 231.
Stoughton Gas and Electric Company, Stoughton. Organization cer-
tified February 9, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stoughton Rubber Company, Boston. Organization certified January
28, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Strange Forged Twist Drill Company, New Bedford. Organization
certified May 21, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Stratton Bros. Company, Gardner. Organization certified July 1,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sbidiey Instalment Company, Boston. Organization certified No-
vember 9, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Startevant and Haley Beef and Supply Company, Boston. Organi-
zation certified August 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Subterranean Cable Company of Boston, Boston. Chartered 1879,
c. 200.
Suburban Light and Power Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied October 16, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Suburban Railroad Company, Newton. Chartered 1891, c. 182.
1893, c. 356.
Suffolk Brewing Company, Boston. Chartered 1875, c. 164.
120 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Suffolk Company, Boston. Organization certified February 7, 1887.
Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Suffolk Cordage Company, Chelsea. Organization certified October
3, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Suffolk Storage Warebouse Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied April 21, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Suffolk Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1887, c. 241. 1889,
c. 409.
Sumner Drug and Chemical Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified February 8, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sun Printing Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization certified
March 18, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sunderland Water Company, Sunderland. Chartered 1884, c. 107.
Suspension Transportation Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 20, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Sutton Cranberry Company, Sutton. Organization certified Decem-
ber 3, 1870. 1870, c. 224.
Sutton Manufacturing Company, Sutton. Chartered 1836, c. 175.
Swan Holt Company, The, Boston. Organization certified May 10,
1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Swansea Dye Works, Swansea. Organization certified February 26,
1890. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Swedish Mercantile Co-operative Company, The, otherwise, Svenska
Hardels Aktic Bolaget, Worcester. Organization certified De-
cember 12, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Swedish Publishing Company, The, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied November 11, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Swift Kiver Company, Enfield. Organized July 6, 1852. 1851,
c. 133.
T. A. Peterson Company, Worcester. Organization certified January
22, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
T. B. Bailey Company. The, Boston. Organization certified June
30, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
T. Dexter Johnson Company, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
T. E. Rich Company, Barre. Organization certified October 3, 1892.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
T. F. Little Oil Company, The, Salem. Organization certified De-
cember 18, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
T. Martin and Brother Manufacturing Company, Chelsea. Organ-
ization certified April 2, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
T Wharf Fish Market Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
June 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 121
Taber Art Company, The, New Bedford. Organization certified
January 24, 1893. Pab. Stat., c. 106.
Taber Organ Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
Febraary 6, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Ta£ft, Gardner, Shepard Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 14, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Talbot Dyewood and Chemical Company, Billerica. Organization
certified December 8, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Talbot Mills, Billerica. Organization certified September 29, 1884.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tarr and Wonson Limited, Gloucester. Organization certified
March 8, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Taunton Brick Company, Taunton. Organization certified February
4, 1868.
Taunton Button Company, Tannton. Organization certified Decem-
ber 23, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Taunton Copper Manufacturing Company, Taunton. Chartered
1831. 1830, c. 19.
Taunton Crucible Company, Taunton. Organization certified Febru-
ary 27, 1865.
Taunton Dye Works and Bleachery Company, Taunton. Organiza-
tion certified April 20, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Taunton Electric Lighting Company, Taunton. Organization certi-
fied June 7, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tannton Evening News, Taunton. Organization certified July 2,
1894. Pub. Stat., c 106.
Taunton Gas Light Company, Taunton. Chartered 1853, c. 3.
Taunton Herald Company, Taunton. Organization certified Decem-
ber 28, 1893. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Taunton Locomotive Manufacturing Company, Taunton. Chartered
1847, c. 8.
Taunton Oil Cloth Company, Taunton. Organization certified June
30, 1857.
Taunton Street Railway Company, Taunton. Chartered 1870, c. 18.
Taunton Theatre Company, Taunton. Organization certified June
10, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Taylor and Tapley Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified January 1, 1884. Pub. Stat.^ c. 106.
Taylor Goodwin Company, Bradford. Organization certified August
10, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Taylor Manufacturing Company, Holyoke. Organization certified
October 14, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Technical Company, The, Boston. Organization certified June 26,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
122 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Tecamseh Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1866, c. 12.
Teellng Baking Company, The, Pittsfield. Organization certified
January 16, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Telegram Newspaper Company, The, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified June 7, 1890. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Texas, Topolobampo and Pacific Railroad and Telegraph Company.
Organization certified March 8, 1881. 1884, c. 75. 1886, c.
316.
Thayer Woolen Company, Oxford. Organization certified July 1,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thomas B. Adams Company, Boston. Organization certified October
4, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thomas Dalby Company, Watertown. Organization certified Decem-
ber 22, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thomas 6. Plant Company, Lynn. Organization certified June 26,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thomas Restieaux Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
September 15, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thomas W. Emerson Company^ Boston. Organization certified
March 3, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thompson & Norris Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
December 10, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thompson & Odell Co., Boston. Organization certified January 20,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thompson Hardware Company, The, Lowell. Organization certified
July 5, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thorn Medicine Company, The, Fitchburg. Organization certified
May 20, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thorndike Company, Palmer. Chartered 1836, c. 25.
Thorndike Manufacturing Company, Lowell. Organization certified
July 6, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thorp and Adams Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organ-
ization certified February 1, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thorp and Martin Co., Boston. Organization certified September 6,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Thorp and Martin Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization
certified May 18,^1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tileston and Hollingsworth Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied May 15, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Torrey and Bentley Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
September 7, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Towle Manufacturing Company, Newburyport. Organization certi-
fied September 18, 1880. 1882, c. 230.
1895-3 PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No- 16. 123
Town Keck Land and Improvement Company of Sandwich, Sand-
wich. Chartered 1888, c. 20.
Towne Fuller Company, The, Westfield. Organization certified
December 8, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Traders' Co-operative Union, Templeton. Organization certified
May 18, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Transcript Publishing Company, The, North Adams. Organization
certified June 26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Traveller Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified May
25, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Travis Bros. Shoe Co., Plymouth. Organization certified April 1,
1893. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Treat Hardware and Supply Company, Lawrence. Organization
certified September 27, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
T^eroont and Suffolk Mills, Lowell and Boston. Chartered 1871,
c. 152.
Treroont Nail Company, Boston and Wareham. Organization certi-
fied September 80, 1859.
Tremont Publishing Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 12, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Trencli Lamp Company, The, Boston. Organization certified August
9, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tribune Building Company, Framlngham. Organization certified
December 22, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tropical Cocoanut Company, Boston. Organization certified Janu-
ary 22, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Troy Cotton and Woollen Manufactory, Fall River. Chartered 1814.
1813, c. 145.
Troy Granite Company, Worcester. Organization certified May 7,
1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tubular Rivet and Stud Company, Boston. Organization certified
February 27, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tucker and Cook Manufacturing Company, Conway. Organization
certified June 2, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tudor Company, Boston. Chai-tered 1868, c. 245.
Turner and Kimball Cabinet Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied May 6, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Turner's Falls Company, Fitchburg. Chartered 1794. 1866, c. 275.
Turner's Falls Cotton Mills, Montague. Organization certified May
31, 1882. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Turner's Falls Driving Association, Montague. Organization certi-
fied November 22, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
124 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Tamer's Falls Land and Improvement Company, Montague. . Char-
tered 1869, c. 108.
Turner's Falls Lumber Company, GUI. Organization certified May
3, 1872.
Tarner*8 Falls Paper Company, Montague. Organization certified
May 29, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Turner's Falls Shoe Company, Moutague. Organization certified
January 28, 1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106. 1891, c. oQ.
Tuxedo Manufacturmg Company, Cambridge. Organization certified
September 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Tyer Rubber Company, Andover. Organization certified February
15, 1876.
Tyler and Moulton Shoe Company, Brookfield. Organization certi-
fied October 1, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Underhay Oil Co., Boston. Organization certified December 22,
1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106. *
Underbill Warming & Ventilating Company, Boston. Organization
certified December 20, 1893. Pub.. Stat., c. 106.
Union Belt Company, Fall River. Organization certified April 24,
1872.
Union Building Association, Georgetown. Organization certified
August 2, 1886. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Union Button Sewing Machine Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified October 5, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Company, (East) Abington. Organization certified Novem-
ber 9, 1868. 1866, c. 290.
Union Cotton Ginning Company, Boston. Organization certified
October 23, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Cotton Manufacturing Company. Fall River. Organization
certified July 26, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Union Cycle Manufacturing Company, Needham. Organization cer-
tified January 8, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Desk Co., Boston. Organization certified October 2, 1889.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Electric Light Company, Franklin. Organization certified
March 11, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Freight Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered 1872, c. 342.
1873, c. 235.
Union Furniture Company, Ayer. Organization certified September
14, 1885. Pub. Stat., o. 106.
Union Glass Company, Somerville. Organization certified June 3,
1864.
Union Glue Company, The, Gloucester. Organization certified June
5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 125
Union Hall AsBociation, The, Cambridge. Chartered 1871, cc. 9,
296. 1873, c. 64.
Union Ice Company, Boston. Organization certified June 29, 1870,
under Gen. 8tat., c. 61.
Union Loan and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1888, c. 422.
Union Machine Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified Decem-
ber 17, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Manufacturing Company, Leominster. Organization certified
July 6, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Marine Railway, Provincetown. Chartered 1852, c. 58.
Union Publishing Company of Boston, Boston. Organization certi-
fied February 17, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Union Street Railway Company, The, New Bedford. Authorized by
Acts of 1887, c. 91. Approved June 11, 1887.
Union Telegraph & Telephone Company, The, Pittsfield. Organiza-
tion certified November 13, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Union Ticket Broker Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
October 25, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Union Water Meter Company, Worcester. Confirmation of organiza-
tion August 7, 1875, under 1870, c. 224, § 12. Confirmation of
organization August 13, 1875, under 1874, c. 349, § 2.
Union Wharf Company, Boston. Chartered 1847, c. 24.
United Cordage Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
November 8, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
United Electric Light Company, Springfield. Organization certified
May 9, 1887. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
United Lines Telegraph Company, New York.
United Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 7, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
United States Automatic Service Company, The, Boston. Organiza-
tion certified September 28, 1893. Pub. Stat, c.l06.
United States Compound Oxygen Company, The, Springfield. Or-
ganization certified January 19, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
United States Cord Company, Lowell. Organization certified July
17, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
United States Envelope Machine Company, Springfield. Organiza-
tion certified March 19, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
United States Finance Company, Boston. Organization certified
June 12, 1891. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
United States Fireworks Company, Boston. Organization certified
November 27, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
United States Hotel Company, Boston. Chartered 1825. 1824; c.
103 ; 1840, c.3d.
126 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
United States Registration Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 28, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
United States Safe Deposit and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered
1887, c. 188. 1888, c. 251.
United States Spring Bed Company, The, Springfield. Organization
certified June 18, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
United States Tubular Bell Company, The, Methnen. Organization
certified December 17, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
United States Watoh Company, Waltham. Organization certified
June 21, 1883. 1885, c. 43.
United States Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified
April 4, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Upton Felting Mills, The, Boston. Organization certified February
21, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Upton Maoufacturing Company, Upton. Organization certified
November 14, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Uxbridge and Northbridge Electric Company, The, Uxbridge. Or-
ganization certified September 25, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Uxbridge Cotton Mills, Uxbridge. Chartered 1840, c. 49.
V. W. Crowson Waste Co., Westfield. Organization certified July
9, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Valley Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization ceilified February
14, 1868.
. Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad Company, Boston. Chartered
1844, c. 134. 1869, cc. 68, 238, 318.
Victor Manufacturing Company, Newburyport. Organization certi-
fied February 9, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Victoria Mills Corporation, The, Newburyport. Organization certi-
fied May 18, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Villa Paint and Ornamental Company, The, Newburyport. Organ-
ization certified June 6, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Vineyard Grove Company, Edgartown. Chartered 1870, c. 110.
Vineyard Haven Marine Railway Company, The, Tisbury. Organ-
ization certified May 21, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Vineyard Haven Water Company, Tisbury. Chartered 1887, c. 157.
Vineyard Haven Wharf Company, (Holmes' Hole) , Tisbury. Char-
tered 1835, c. 19. 1881, c. 31.
Voorhees Electric Company, Boston. Organization certified June 6,
1893. Pub. Stat.,c. 106.
Vulcan Foundery Co-operative Company, Worcester. Organization
certified June 15, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. A. Graham Company, Marlborough. Organization certified
October 25, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 127
W. B. Witherell Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
May 5, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. C. Lewis Shoe Company, Haverhill. Organization certified
November 18, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. C. Packard Furniture and Carpet Company, Salem. Organization
certified August 25, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106. '
W. C. Young Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Organization
certified March 31, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. D. Wilmarth & Co. Corporation, Attleborough. Organization
certified January 18, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. E. Howe Company, Worcester. Organization certified February
17, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. F. Adams Company, Springfield. Organization certified July
13, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. H. Doble Company, Quincy. Organization certified February 1,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. H. Hill Envelope Company, Worcester. Organization certified
April 26, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. H. Wilmarth & Co. Corporation, Attleborough. Organization
certified January 4, 1894. Pub. Stat , c 106.
W. J. Boynton Baking Company, The, Groton. Organization certi-
fied March 25, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. J. Davis Electric Company, Pittsfield. Organization certified
December 27, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
W. J. Thompson & Co. Corporation, Boston. Organization certified
June 29, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. L. Douglas Shoe Company, Brockton. Organization certified
March 2, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. M. Colby Company, Boston. Organization certified April 13,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
W. S. Reed Toy Company, Leominster. Organization certified Feb-
ruary 8, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Wachnsett Milk Company, Worcester. Organization certified No-
vember 29, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waehusett Mills, Worcester. Organization certified March 28, 1894.
Pub. Stot., c. 106.
Waehusett Shirt Company, Leominster. Organization certified Sep-
tember 25, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wade and Reed Company, Boston. Organization certified June 19,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wading River Reservoir Company, Taunton. Chartered 1866, c.
171. 1869, c. 376.
Wadswortli Howland & Co., Incorporated, Boston. Organization
certified January 5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
128 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Wainwright Manufacturing Company of Massachusetts, The, Med-
ford. Organization certified May 4, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waite Felting Company, Franklin. Organization certified July 19,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wakefield and Stoneham Street Railway Company, The. Organiza-
tion certified May 24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Wakefield Rattan Company, Wakefield. Organization certified Oc-
tober 17, 1873.
Wakefield Real Estate and Building Association, Wakefield. Char«
tered 1871, c. 120. 1891, c. 13.
Wakefield Water Company, Wakefield. Chartered 1872, c. 335.
1883, c. 139.
Walker and Pratt Manufacturing Company, Watertown. Organiza-
tion certified March 31, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Walker Stetson Sawyer Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 20, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Walkerwood Chemical Company, Boston. Organization certified
July 3, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Walpole Emery Mills, Ashland. Organization certified March 13,
1877. 1881, c. 30.
Walter M. Lowney Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
October 7, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waltham Coal Company, Waltham. Organization certified June 29,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waltham Emery Wheel Company, Waltham. Organization certified
June 21, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waltham Gas Light Company, Waltham. Chartered 1853, c. 118.
Waltham Lumber Company, Waltham. Organization certified May
31, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waltham Music Hall Company, Waltham. Organization certified
November 1, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Waltham Tribune Company, Waltham. Organization certified April
10, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waltham Watch Tool Company of Springfield, Massachusetts, The,
Springfield. Organization certified April 8, 1890. Pub. Stat.,
c. 106.
Walworth Construction and Supply Company, Boston. Organization
certified October 5, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Walworth Light & Power Company, Boston. Organization certified
May 8, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Walworth Manufacturing Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 27, 1871.
Wamesit Power Company, Lowell. Chartered 1865, c. 117.
I&a5.;\ PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 129
Wameali Steam .Mill Company, Lowell. Organization certified Oc-
tober 14, 1853.
Wampanoag Mills, Fall Biver. Organization certified June 9, 1871. *
Wamsutta Hotel Company, Attleborough. Organization certified
April 29, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Wamsntta Mills, New Bedford. Chartered 1846, c. 201.
Wannacomet Water Company, Nantucket. Chartered 1880, c. 27.
Wanooenoc Power Company, Fitchburg. Organization certified
October 30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waquoit Herring River Company, Waquoit, Falmouth. Organized
October 15, 1866. 1866, c. 187.
Ware Electric Company, Ware. Organization certified September
18, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ware Lumber Company, Ware. Organization certified October 24,
1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ware Pratt Company, Worcester. Organization certified January
24, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ware River Manufacturing Company, Ware. Organization certified
August 8, 1868.
Ware River Railroad Company, Ware. Chartered 1867, c. 76.
Warner Manufacturing Company, The, Greenfield. Organization
certified August 19, 1887. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Warren Boot and Shoe Company, The, Boston. Organization certi-
fied April 14, 1893. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Warren Building and Improvement Company, The, Warren. Organ-
ization certified March 7, 1894. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Warren Cotton Mills, Warren. Chartered 1854, c. 79.
Warren Electric Company, Warren. Organization certified October
2, 1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Warren Soap Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified March 21, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Warren Thread Company, Ashland. Organization certified January
9, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Warwick Cycle Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organization
certified December 26, 1893. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Washacum Pottery Company, The, Sterling. Organization certified
May 23, 1892. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Washburn and Garfield Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Or-
ganization certified May 11, 1889. Pub. Stat, c. 106.
Washburn and Moen Manufacturing Company, Worcester. Char-
tered 1868, c. 31.
Washington Mills Company, Lawrence. Chartered 1884, c. 54.
130 TAX COxMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Washington Mills Emery Manufacturing Company, Ashland. Or-
ganization certified May 6, 1868. ,
* Wason Manufacturing Company, Springfield. Organization certified
. AprU 17, 1862.
Watchman Publishing Company, The, Boston. Organization certi-
fied December 23, 1876. 1870, c. 224.
Waterhouse Shannon & Muuroe (Incorporated), Boston. Organiza-
tion certified March 10, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Waterman Clothing Company, Franklin. Organization certified
July 29, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Watertown Machine Company, Watertown. Organization certified
February 20, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Watertown Water Supply Company, Watertown. Chartered 1884,
c. 251.
Watuppa Reservoir Company, Fall River. Chartered 1826, c. 81.
Wauregan Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified Octo-
ber 16, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Waushacum Lake Company, Sterling. Chartered 1891, c. 69.
Waverley Company, Boston. Chartered 1855, c. 217.
Waverley Hall Company, Belmont. Organization certified December
14, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Webster Electric Company, The, Webster. Organization certified
July 6, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Weeden Manufacturing Corporation, New Bedford. Organization
certified June 16, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Weeks & Potter Company, Boston. Organization certified January
1, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Weetamoe Mills, Fall River. Chartered 1871, c. 50.
Weinman Company, The, Boston. Organization certified August 21,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Weinz Manufacturing Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
December 24, 1890. Pub. Stat.f c 106.
Weir Stove Company, Taunton. Organization certified December
28, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wekepeke Woolen Company, Clinton. Organization certified No-
vember 5, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wellesley Co-operative Creamery Association, Wellesley. Organiza-
tion certified May 17, 1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wellfleet Marine Insurance Company, Wellfleet. Chartered 1885,
c. 199.
West Boylston Manufacturing Company, The, West Boylston.
Chartered 1814. 1813, c. 84 ; 1823, c. 29.
1895-3 PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 131
West Cbop Steamboat Company, Boston. Organization certified
Jane 8, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
West Dudley Co-operative Creamery Association, Dudley. Organ-
ization certified January 11, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
West End Street Railway Company, Boston. Organized January
22, 1887. 1887, c. 413.
West End Supply Company, The, Boston. Organization certified
December 18, 1890. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
West Lynn Trust Company, Lynn. Chartered 1892, c. 396.
West Stockbridge Railroad Corporation, West Stockbridge. Char-
tered 1836, c. 132.
West Ware Paper Company, The, Ware. Organization certified
October 19, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
West Warren Co-operative Association, Warren. Organization cer-
tified June 6, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Westboro' Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Company, The, West-
borough. Organization certified August 18, 1890. Pub. Stat.,
c. 106.
Westboro' Factory Association, The, Westborough. Organization
certified July 3, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Westborough Gas and Electric Company, The, Westborough. Or-
ganization certified October 9, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Western Union Telegraph Company, New York.
Westfield Brick Company, Westfield. Organization certified July 30,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Westfield Cigar Company, Westfield. Organization certified Jan-
uary 26, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Westfield Gas Light Company, Westfield. Organization certified
August 13, 1868.
Westfield Heating and Plumbing Company, Westfield. Organization
certified August 23, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Westfield Power Company, Westfield. Organization certified July
11, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Westfield Whip Company, Westfield. Organization certified January
8, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Westbampton Water Company, Westhampton. Organization certi-
fied September 11, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 110.
Weston Illuminating Company, Boston. Organization certified May
4, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Westport Harbor Aquedact Company, Westport. Organization cer-
tified July 18, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 110.
Westport Point Hotel Company of Massachusetts, The, Westport.
Organization certified April 9, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
132 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT, [Jan.
Westport Wooden Ware Company, The, Boston. Organization cer-
tified March 22, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Weymouth and Braintree Publishing Company, Weymouth. Organ-
ization certified September 24, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891,
c. 360.
Weymouth Light and Power Company, Weymouth. Organization
certified Februaiy 18, 1889. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Weymouth Seam-face Granite Company, Weymouth. Organization
certified November 14, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Weymouth Shoe Supply Company, The, Weymouth. Organization
certified June 14, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wheeler Cotton Mills, Millbury. Organization certified June 19,
1867.
Wheeler Express Company, Marlborough. Organization certified
May 18, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wheeler Refiector Company, Boston. Organization certified Novem-
ber 26, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Wheelman Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Novem-
ber 7, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wheelock Engine Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
January 25, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whitcomb Envelope Company, The, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied January 16, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
White and Bagley Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
January 9, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
White Oak River Corporation, New Bedford. Organization certified
May 12, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
White, Son Company, Boston. Organization certified December 22,
1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whitin Machine Works, Northbridge. Chartered 1868, c. 140.
Whiting Paper Company, Holyoke. Organization certified June 11,
1872. Gen. Stat., c. 61.
Whitinsville Street Railway Company, Northbridge. Organization
certified December 3, 1890. Pub. Stat, c. 113.
Whitman Co-operative Store, The, Whitman. Organization certified
October 16, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whitman Electric Company, Whitman. Organization certified No-
vember 19, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whitman Manufacturing Company, Whitman. Organization certified
May 5, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whitman Paper Box Company, Whitman. Organization certified
April 16, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whitman Street Railway Company, The, Whitman. Organization
certified October 30, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No- 16. 133
Whitmore Manafactnring Company, The, Holyoke. Organization
certified December 14, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Whitney Reed Chair Company, Leominster. Organization certified
September 19, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whittemore-Woodbury Company, Boston. Organization certified
April 13, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whittenton Mannfacturing Company, Taunton. Organization cer-
tified May 16, 1883. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whittier Cotton Mills, Lowell. Organization certified January 29,
1887. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Whittier Machine Company, Boston. Organization certified Septem-
ber 3, 1874.
Wickeraham Quoin Company, Boston. Organization certified Febru-
ary 19, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wilbraham Woolen Company, The, Wilbraham. Organization cer-
tified November 22, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wilder & Clark Shoe Company, The, Newburyport. Organization
certified July 16, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
WUey and Russell Manufacturing Company, Greenfield. Organiza-
tion certified September 16, 1874.
Willey Company, Springfield. Organization certified November 24,
1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wm. F. Morgan Company, The, Lynn. Organization certified July
26, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William G. Bell Company, The, Boston. Organization certified Sep-
tember 17, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William H. Bums Company, Worcester. Organization certified
September 24, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William H. Keeden Printing Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied August 1, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William H. King Sons Company, Springfield. Organization certified
November 9, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William H. Raymond Grocery Company, Boston. Organization cer-
tified November 18, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William J. Dinsmore Corporation, The, Boston. Organization certi-
fied September 10, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wm. Mason Manufacturing Company, Dighton. Organization certi-
fied March 4, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William N. Flynt Granite Company, Monson. Organization certified
March 2, 1885. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William S. Hills Company, Boston. Organization certified January
3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
William Skinner Mannfacturing Company, Holyoke. Organization
certified June 28, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
134 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Williams Manafacturing Company, The, Northampton. Organiza-
tion certified February 20, 1868.
Williams Market, Boston. Chartered 1849, c. 243.
Williams Table and Lumber Company, The, Somerville. Organiza-
tion certified April 29, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Williamsburgh Co-operative Creamery Association, The, Williams-
burg. Organization certified August 10, 1892. Pub. Stat., c.
106.
Williamstown Electric Light Company, The, Williamstown. Organ-
ization certified February 8, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Williamstown Gas Company, Williamstown. Organization certified
March 9, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Williamstown Manufacturing Company, Williamstown. Chartered
1865, c. 169.
Williamstown Water Company, Williamstown. Chartered 1885, c.
311.
Williston and Knight Company, Easthampton. Organization certi-
fied February 8, 1866. 1880, c. 45.
Winchendon Electric Light and Power Company, Winchendon. Or-
ganization certified September 26, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Winchester Furniture Company, The, Winchester. Organization
certified April 24, 1886. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wiukley and Maddox Ice Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified May 29, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Winuislmmet Company, Boston. Chartered 1833, c. 197.
Winnisimmet Railroad Company, Chelsea. Chartered 1857, c. 227.
Winthrop Loan and Trust Company, Boston. Chartered 1891 , c. 109.
Wire Goods Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified Sep-
tember 21, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Withereli Shoe Company, Clinton. Organization certified February
23, 1893. Pub. SUt., c. 106.
Woburn Electric Light Company, Woburn. Organization certified
May 22, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Woburn Gas Light Company, Woburn. Chartered 1854, c. 211.
Woburn Power Company, Woburn. Organization certified June 6,
1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wollaston Foundry Company, Boston. Organization certified Octo-
ber 19, 1874.
Woman's Journal, Proprietors of the, Boston. Chartered 1870, c. 5.
Woodward and Brown Piano Company, Boston. Organization certi-
fied March 30, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester and Millbury Street Railway Company. Organization
certified May 13, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16. 135
Worcester and Nashua Telegraph Company, Worcester. Chartered
1855, c. 100.
Worcester and Shrewsbury Railroad Company, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified April 17, 1873.
Worcester and Shrewsbury Street Railway Company, Worcester.
Organization certified July 9, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Worcester Bedding Manufacturing Company, The, Worcester. Or-
ganization certified January 31, 1889. Pub. Stat , c. 106.
Worcester Bleach and Dye Works Company, The, Worcester. Or-
ganization certified March 3, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Cholesterine Company, Worcester. Organization certified
February 21, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Coal Company, Worcester. Organization certified March
22, 1880. 1870, c. 224.
Worcester Consolidated Street Railway Company, Worcester. Or-
ganized February 27, 1886. 1887, c. 284.
Worcester Construction Company, The, Worcester. Organization
certified March 25, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Co-operative Meat Market, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified May 3, 1892. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Corset Company, The, Worcester. Organization certified
February 29, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Counter Company, Worcester. Organization certified
October 4, 1882. Pub. Stat., c. 106 ; 1891, c 360.
Worcester Dry Goods Company, The, Worcester. Organization cer-
tified August 2, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Electric Light Company, The, WorcQ^ter. Organization
certified January 9, 1884. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Envelope Company, Worcester. Organization certified
July 24, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Excursion Car Company, The, Worcester. Organization
certified April 3, 1878. 1870, c. 224.
Worcester Fire Appliance Company, The, Worcester. Organization
certified February 1, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Cras Light Company, Worcester. Chartered 1851, c. 159.
1869, c. 25.
Worcester, Leicester and Spencer Street Railway Company, Leicester.
Organization certified March 7, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 113.
Worcester Machine Works, Worcester. Organization certified March
30, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester, Nashua and Rochester Railroad Company, Worcester.
Chartered 1883, c. 129.
Worcester Reed Chair Company, Gardner. Organization certified
May 17, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
136 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
Worcester Safe Deposit and Trast CompaDj, Worcester. Chartered
1868, c. 77.
Worcester Steam HeatiDg Company, Worcester. Organization certi-
fied June 3, 1892. Fab. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Storage Company, Worcester. Organization certified May
8, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Theatre Association, Worcester. Chartered 1868, c. 125.
1890, c. 9.
Worcester Thread Company, Clinton. Organization certified April
3, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worcester Wire Company, Worcester. Organization certified July
2, 1877. 1870, c. 224.
Worcester Woolen Mill Company, The, Worcester. Organization
certified February 11, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Workingmen's Building Association, Boston. Chartered 1888, c. 92.
Workingmen's Loan Association, Boston. Chartered 1888, c. 108.
Woronoco Park Association, The, Westfield. Organization certified
July 15, 1893. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Woronoco Street Railway Company, Westfield. Organization certi-
fied September 8, 1890. Pub. Stat, c. 113.
Worthington Co-operative Creamery Association, Worthington. Or-
ganization certified October 9, 1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Worthy Paper Company, Agawam. Organization certified October
3, 1871.
Woven Cane Fabric Company, The, Wakefield. Organization certi-
fied March 1, 1890. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wright and Colton Wire Cloth Company, The, Worcester. Organ-
ization certified December 28, 1889. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wright and Potter Printing Company, The, Boston. Organization
certified January 17, 1879. 1870, c. 224.
Wright Machine Company, Worcester. Organization certified Janu-
ary 3, 1881. 1870, c. 224.
Wright Manufacturing Company, Lawrence. Organization certified
December 27, 1873.
Wright Wire Cloth Company, Palmer. Organization certified Janu-
ary 21, 1888. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wrought Iron Casting Company, Boston. Organization certified
December 2, 1891. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Wyoming Mills, Fall River. Organization certified April 17, 1890.
Pub. Stat., c. 106.
Ziegler Electric Company, Boston. Organization certified August 16,
1894. Pub. Stat., c. 106.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 137
Change of Name of Corporations.
The following-named corporations have been authorized to change
their names, under provisions of chapter 360, Acts of 1891 : —
French Protestant College, The, of Springfield. To French Ameri-
can College. Jane 28, 1894.
Gamey Hot Water Heater Company. To Gurney Heater Manu-
facturing Company. May 25, 1894.
Horton Akerly Company, The. To Horton Manufacturing Company,
The. July 25, 1894.
Linnett Shirt Company. To Greylock Shirt Company. February
13, 1894.
McDonald and Gill Company, The. To Christian Witness Company,
The. December 17, 1894.
"Newton Cottage Hospital, The. To Newton Hospital. February
28, \S9A.
Stems Paper Company, The. To Eastern Paper Company. Febru-
ary lOy 1894.
Voee and Catler Manufacturing Company. To National Roller
Chafe Iron Company. February 20, 1894.
138 TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT. [Jan.
TABLE B.
Appeals in 1804.
Whole number of appeals from taxes of previous year, . 1 6
from taxes of 1894, . . .52
68
Abatements allowed, 58
refused, 9
Appeals continued, 1
68
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16.
139
TABLE C.
CORPORATION TAXES DISTBIBUTBD.
•
Abington, . . . tl,9G5 18
Billerica, . .
. (3,876 94
Acton, • ■
1
1
657 11
Black stono.
1
120 11
Acushnet,
•
1
167 72
Blandford,
1
237 49
AcUuns, •
1 1
1
. 2,679 53
Bolton, .
1
20 43
Agawam, .
■
1
427 61
Boston, .
1
.832,868 52
Allord, . .
1 I
<
80 04
Bourne, .
•
. 1,947 11
Amesbmy,
1 •
(
, 3,266 03
Boxborough, ,
63 62
Amherst, .
1 «
1
, 1,630 86
Boxford, .
»
190 29
Afldover, . .
1 t
1
. 8,166 36
Bojiston, .
•
6 95
Arlington,
i •
«
. 6,374 69
Bradford, ,
»
, 2,176 62
Ashbuniham,
• •
1
63 70
Brain tree, ,
1
. 6,051 77
Ashby,
• •
1
310 10
Brewster, ,
1
466 17
Ashfield, .
1 fl
1
21 23
Bridgewater, ,
, 2,636 06
Asbland, •
1 ■
1
481 62
Brimfield, ,
»
116 22
Athol,
> t
•
916 72
Brockton,
0
1
7,711 26
AttleboTongb, .
t
i
1,828 89
Brookfield,
1
1,328 69
Aabum, •
•
1
126 84
Brookline, ,
1
. 112,469 64
ATon,
1 •
1
316 48
Buckland,
1
75 89
Ajer,
1 1
1
606 79
Burlington,
1
69 78
Barnstable,
•
• 1
. 4,348 76
Cambridge,
1
, 68,985 14
Barre, •
• 1
1
731 88
Canton, .
9,638 48
Becket, .
• 1
1
214 02
Carlisle, .
*
30 29
Bedford, .
• 1
1
382 34
Carver, .
736 34
Belchertown,
• <
• 1
136 30
Charlemont, ,
1
19 57
Belllngham,
I «
1 a
3 68
Charlton, . ,
t
386 96
Belmont, .
■
• 1
. 4,138 16
Chatham, ,
1
247 47
Berkley, .
•
•
213 72
Chelmsford,
1
. 1,135 42
Berlin, .
•
•
60 94
Chelsea, .
1
. 15,795 80
Bernardston,
■
•
270 82
Cheshire, .
•
379 20
Beverly, .
t
•
. 21,388 69
Chester, .
•
. 1,194 62
140
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Chesterfield, .
(4 80
Florida, .
-
Chicopee,
. 5,796 57
Foxborough,
(727 90
Chilmark,
58 20
Framingham,
. 24,572 48
Clarksburg,
,
Franklin, .
. 8,762 51
Clinton, .
, 1,839 21
Freetown,
382 55
Cohasset, .
. 13,821 65
Colrain, .
269 30
Gardner, .
. 2,637 20
Concord, .
. 7,866 25
Gay Head,
-
Conway, .
; 4 34
Georgetown,
519 46
Cottage City,
60 62
Gill, .
72 26
Cunimington, .
184 84
Gloucester,
Goshen, .
•
. 8,830 35
3 41
Dalton, ,
. 10,745 75
Gosnold, .
9 71
Dana,
Grafton, .
. 1,097 53
Danvers, .
1,112 98
Gran by, .
235 47
Dartmouth,
2,990 31
Granville,
106 20
Dedham, .
. 8,731 68
Great Barringt
on, .
. 6,468 79
Deerfield,
443 30
Greenfield,
«
. 5,641 26
Dennis, .
. 1,640 13
Greenwich,
52 83
Dighton, .
160 47
Groton, .
«*
4,400 36
Douglas, .
215 00
Grovcland,
174 16
Dover, .
3,014 21
Dracut, .
45 46
Hadley, .
308 96
Dudley, .
302 44
Halifax, .
•
88 14
Dunstable,
254 64
Hamilton,
1,036 61
Duxbury,
2,376 73
Hampden,
17 20
•
Hancock, .
272 06
East Bridgewater, .
1,845 37
Hanover, .
. 3,443 25
Eastham, .
298 01
Hanson, .
111 34
Easthampton, .
1,095 16
Hardwick,
842 18
Easton, .
10,380 38
Harvard, .
1,866 75
Edgartown, ,
291 99
Harwich,. *. .
t
1,330 94
Egremont, <
269 16
Hatfield, .
281 83
Enfield, .
. 2,635 67
Haverhill,
13,984 27
Erving, .
77 85
Hawley, .
6 99
Essex,
, 867 40
Heath,
43 42
Everett, ,
«
, 1,991 03
Hingham,
Hinsdale,
a
. 10,956 74
679 25
Fairhaven,
. 1,952 33
Hoi brook, .
1,114 62
Fall River, ,
. 14,104 18
Holden, . .
65 73
Falmouth,
. 11,503 26
Holland, .
-
Fitchburg,
. 29,448 72
Holliston,
692 28
Holyoke, . . • .
.tl8,639 83
Maynard,
XV*
. f 737 68
Hopedale, . .
. 13,712 76
Medfield,
2,204 00
Uopkinton,
92 43
Medford, .
, -
. 19,169 19
Hubbardston, .
226 38
Med way, .
224 26
Hudson, . . . 1
. 1,666 69
Melrose, .
. 6,080 98
Hnll
219 77
1
Mendon, .
107 98
Huntington,
88 86
Merrimac,
446 78
HydePark^ .
4,746 17
Methuen, .
. 1,922 60
Middleborougfa
f '
. 4,863 30
Ipswich, . • . .
. 3,668 39
Middlefield, .
447 86
Kingston, . * .
3,240 97
Middleton,
Mil ford, .
4 21
. 3,276 87
Lakeyille,
Lancaster, • - .
Lanesborough,
Lawrence,
J<jW^ « • • • 1
Leicester, . •
Lenox, . . • .
Leominster,
Leverett, . . . ,
716 09
2,694 81
33 97
10,463 97
766 Q8
. 2,414 63
. 2.080 10
. 6,098 38
34 80
Millbnry,
Millis, .
Milton, .
Monroe, .
Monson, .
Montague,
Monterey, •
Montgomery,
Mount Washin
«
1
1
•
gton.
. 1,161 99
. 146 99
. 39,460 71
66 00
. 8,488 03
. 1,772 96
67 13
6 86
Lexington,
. 4,761 16
Nahant, . . . .
18,669 43
Leyden, .
19
Nantucket,
. 2,330 24
Lini'oln, . • . ,
. 2,369 19
Natick, .
. 3,013 36
Littleton,
638 92
Needham,
. 2,227 76
Longmeadow, .
. 1,167 69
New Ashford, .
•
-
Lowell, .
. 67,604 06
New Bedford, .
66,899 92
Ludlow, . . * .
93 27
New Braintree,
84 02
Lunenburg, . ' •
198 63
New Marlborough,
98 43
L}'un,
. 28,666 79
New Salem, .
-
Lynnfield,
64 13
Newbury, . •
Newbury port, .
*
467 61
21,291 46
Ualden, . • * .
. 60,084 88
Newton, .
, • ,
71,400 63
Manchester,
. 16,281 86
Noi-fblk, .
30 16
Mansfield,
402 06
North Adams, . *
, • ,
. 6,030 13
Marblehead, .
. 6,218 26
North Andover,
7,178 26
Marion, . . • .
696 46
North Attleborough
» •
3,282 96
Marlborough, • *
. 2,886 92
Nortli Brookfield, .
2,624 68
Marshfield,
. 1,667 60
North Reading,
43 17
Mashpee, .
-
Northampton, .
«
9,362 26
Mattapoisett, .
. 2,137 41
Northborough,
i
824 97
142
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Northbridge,
Northfield,
Norton, •
Norwell, .
Norwood,
Oakham, .
Orange, .
Orleans, .
Otis,
Oxford, .
Palmer, .
Paxton, .
Peabody, .
Pelham, .
Pembroke,
Pepperell,
Peru,
Petersham,
Phillipston,
Pittsfield,
Plainfield,
Plymouth,
Plympton,
Prescott, •
Princeton,
Provincetown,
Quincy, .
Randolph,
Raynham,
Reading, .
Kehoboth,
Revere, .
Richmond,
Rochester,
Rockland,
Rockport,
Rowe,
Rowley, .
f 15,157 14
1,281 19
118 10
2,040 75
1,980 10
8 04
19,211 79
1,025 09
8 42
1,085 98
1,241 17
8,955 18
74 08
22 64
1,117 07
98
498 21
18,729 43
122 02
6,244 70
68 54
1 71
404 40
1,283 53
9,256 73
4,514 17
201 68
2,471 05
124 38
8,677 61
22 26
494 77
1,681 79
578 25
7 48
184 62
Royal ston,
Russell, .
Rutland, .
Salem,
Salisbury,
Sandisfield,
Sandwich,
Saugus, .
Savoy, ,
Scituate, •
Seekonk, .
Sharon, .
Sheffield,
Shelburne,
Sherbom,
Shirley, .
Shrewsbury,
Shutesbury,
Somerset,
Somerville,
South Hadley,
Southampton,
South borough,
Southbridge,
Southwick,
Spencer, .
Springfield,
Sterling, .
Stockbridge,
Stoneham,
Stoughton,
Stow,
Sturbridge,
Sudbury, .
Sunderland,
Sutton, •
Swampscott,
Swanzcy,
Taunton, .
t611 60
82 68
12 49
27,549 19
168 18
89 81
764 80
248 19
98
1,462 00
30 89
2,437 30
530 89
297 02
252 62
573 57
215 97
7 04
84 33
16,409 53
2,580 51
4 84
8,570 96
9,174 95
195 21
3,648 85
90,255 37
222 26
5361 43
504 56
2,413 84
133 87
167 26
1,099 46
29 08
264 90
13,415 10
410 68
18,457 60
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
143
Templeton,
■
•
•415 35
West Bridgewater, .
t5l5 41
Tewksbury,
■
•
318 01
WestBrookficld, .
1,171 07
Tisbnry, . ,
) •
■
645 12
West Newbury,
107 47
Tolland, .
• 1
•
—
West Springfield, .
3,932 94
Topsfield,
1 •
«
244 77
West Stookbridge, •
323 46
TowDseDd,
1 1
t
799 77
West Tisbury,
142 13
Truro,
> ■
•
81 82
Westborougb, .
1,327 02
Tyngsborough,
» ■
•
456 22
Westfield,
8,183 93
Tyringbam,
1 1
«
27 87
Westford,
W^esthampton,
. 2,825 19
2 38
Upton,
• 1
«
755 66
Westminster, .
446 67
Uxbridge,
• 1
I
1,232 16
Weston, . . . .
Westport,
. 11,815 17
969 50
Wakefield,
• i
■
8,063 51
Weymouth,
. 3,495 80
Wales, •
■ 1
•
-
W hately, . . . *
6 29
Walpole, .
1 ■
•
887 67
Whitman,
. 1,287 82
Waltham,
• 1
■
11,376 35
Wilbraham, .
. 1,304 85
Ware, .
■ 1
•
7,048 34
Williamsburg,
104 72
Wareham,
• t
■
2,801 65
Williamstown,
275 35
Warren, .
1 ■
•
2,390 18
Wilmington, • .
10 39
Warwick,
1 ■
•
87 22
Winehendon, .
292 48
Washington,
I <
> 1
19
Winchester, . •
. 9,826 55
Watertown,
» «
> a
. 6«598 33
Windsor, . .
, -
Wajland,
• 4
1 1
. 1,364 95
W inthrop, •
. 1,492 67
Webster, .
» «
1
. 10,306 95
Wobum, . . .
. 3,217 83
Wellesley,
»
1
, 7,480 87
Worcester, •
. 122,400 06
Wellfleet,
»
■
. 1,848 68
Worthington, .
6 68
Wendell, .
•
2 46
Wrentham,
650 34
Wenbam,
•
. 249 32
West Bojlston,
•
. 1,099 21
Yarmouth, • •
. 2,561 73
144
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
TABLE D.
AbingtoD,
Acton,
Acushnet,
Adams, .
Agawam,
Alford, .
Amesbury,
Amherst, .
Andover, .
Arlington,
Ashbumham,
Ashby,
Ashfield, .
Ashland, .
Athol,
Attleboroagh,
Auburn, .
Avon,
Ajer,
Barnstable,
Barro,
Becket, .
Bedford, ,
Belchertown,
Bellingbam,
Belmont,
Berkley, .
Berlin,
Bernardston,
Beverly, .
Bill erica, .
BANK TAXES DISTBIBUTBD
. 1761 97
Blackstone,
191 45
Blandford,
536 52
Bolton, ,
523 86
Boston, •
614 88
Bourne, .
333 85
Boxborough,
. 1,694 52
Boxford, ,
. 1,688 81
Boylston,.
. 2,558 56
Bradford,
. 9,202 84
Braintree,
150 37
Brewster,
145 22
Bridgewater,
841 79
Brim field.
76 46
Brockton,
373 79
Brookfield,
486 18
Brookline,
H
53 82
Buckland,
35 17
Burlington,
122 29
Cambridge,
1,961 44
Canton, .
624 96
Carlisle, .
401 62
Carver, ,
96 26
Charlomont,
538 03
Charlton,
94 69
Chatham, .
2,839 14
Chelmsford,
671 70
Chelsea, .
185 35
Cheshire, .
510 19
Chester, .
4,340 06
Chesterfield,
393 09
Chicopee,
t210 23
151 54
158 87
21,833 53
205 96
26 08
219 93
156 11
2,335 81
1^40 78
494 29
2.328 01
116 73
1,021 85
339 45
16,810 70
131 72
75 13
16,269 66
571 88
26 05
928 70
188 70
431 03
1,161 31
1,018 42
2,493 39
483 83
108 76
151 55
1,186 53
Chilmark,
^ yj
MJA^J
tl48 99
Framingham, ,
x\/«
1
. f2,535 41
Clarksburg,
-
Franklin, .
1
1
235 61
Clinton, .
163 16
Freetown,
»
. 1,337 68
Cohasset, .
2,197 88
•
Colrain, .
87 49
Gardner, . .
1
1 •
658 18
Concord, .
1,978 14
Gay Head,
.
Conway, .
340 11
Georgetown, ,
168 41
Cottage City,
34 44
Gill,
1
104 18
CnmmingtoD,
42 00
Gloucester,
Goshen, .
1
«
>
2,103 16
27 61
DaltOD, .
1,437 23
Gosnold, .
•
_
Dana,
149 73
Grafton, .
1
573 31
DanTers, .
1,499 40
Granby, .
•
454 41
Dartmouth,
3,204 94
Granville,
114 14
Dedhani, .
2.104 61
Great Barringt
on.
759 46
Deerfield,
566 49
Greenfield,
1
. 1,585 54
Dennis, .
1.911 35
Greenwich,
1
110 95
Dighton, .
934 99
Groton, .
I
. 1,045 02
Douglas, .
139 09
Groveland,
1
268 01
Dover,
407 73
Dracut, .
205 49
Dudley, .
182 80
Hadley, ..
855 05
Dunstable,
267 67
Halifax, .
46 01
Duxbury,
857 77
Hamilton,
552 80
Hampden,
22 73
East Bridgewater, .
747 14
Hancock, .
356 91
Eastham, .
153 02
Hanover, .
987 31
Easthampton, .
t 9
465 87
Hanson, .
379 58
Easton, .
. 2,007 46
Hard wick,
672 99
Edgariown,
. 503 93
Harvard, .
663 55
Egremont,
95 08
Harwich, .
363 50
Enfield, .
736 83
Hatfield, ..
. 1,575 35
Erring, .
29 13
Haverhill,
3300 60
Essex,
. 1,639 46
Hawley, .
3 30
Everett, .
. 1,513 75
Heath,
Hingbum,
33 72
. 1,712 36
Fairhaven,
. 2,136 59
Hinsdale,
175 39
Fall RiTer,
. 1,013 61
Holbrook,
. 2,201 43
Falmouth,
. 3,496 14
Holden, .
101 88
Fitchburg,
. 1,846 49
Holland, .
2 18
Florida, .
22 05
Holliston,
. 1,006 84
Fozborongh, .
581 57
Holyoke, .
. 2,675 56
146
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Hopedale,
. 12,647 67
Maynard,
t38 54
Uopkinton,
403 67
Medfield, .
565 11
Hubbardston, .
209 60
Medf ord, .
. 3,537 39
Hadson, .
666 83
Med way, .
206 72
Hull,
138 12
Melrose, .
587 86
HuDtiDgtOD, .
145 16
Mendon, .
454 62
Hyde Park, .
949 52
Merrimao,
Methuen, .
811 73
562 98
Ipswich, .
471 90
Middleborougl:
Middlefield, .
U
. 2,245 48
76 72
Kingston,
. 2,184 22
Middleton,
Milford, .
82 94
482 29
Lakeville,
465 91
Millbury,
239 26
Lancaster,
853 14
Millis, .
279 05
Lanesborough,
64 78
Milton, .
. 4,760 21
Tiawrence,
. 2,085 04
Monroe, .
-
o^ee, • • •
819 70
Monson, .
506 01
Leicester,
. 1,917 77
Montague,
503 56
Lenox, .
729 86
Monterey,
78 04
Leominster,
. 1,121 79
Montgomery,
-
Leverett, .
49 12
Mount Washington,
-
Lexington,
670 52
Leyden, .
91 22
Nahant, • . . . 5,250 29
Lincoln, .
. 1,205 12
Nantucket,
876 96
Littleton, .
173 86
Katick, .
. 1,548 12
Longmeadow, .
. 1,821 76
Needham,
496 93
Lowell, .
. 4,487 44
New Ashford,
_
Ludlow, .
23 13
New Bedford, .
. 8,170 87
Lunenburg,
224 01
New Braiutree,
38 55
Lynn,
. 8,706 82
New Marlborough,
118 46
Lynnfield,
224 51
New Salem, .
110 34
Newbury,
. 1,733 92
Maiden, .
. 3,882 22
Newburyport,
. 3,042 44
Manchester, .
. 2.782 77
Newton, .
. 18,213 35
Mansfield,
346 49
Norfolk, .
105 30
Marblehead, .
. 1,465 77
North Adams, ,
187 73
Marion, .
703 99
North Andover,
. 3,401 70
Marlborough, .
538 85
North Attleborongh
» •
603 03
Marshfield,
457 83
North BrooKfield, .
165 55
Mashpee, .
.
North Reading,
85 93
Mattapoisett, .
498 26
Northampton, .
I
1,941 06
1
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
147
NorthhoTough^
. td05 20
Rowe, .
1
•
$57 55
.Northbrldge, .
253 42
Rowley, .
) ■ 1
442 08
Northfield,
238 62
Rojalston,
■ «
, 1,150 43
Norton, .
791 81
•
Russell, .
1 ■ 1
10 51
Norwell, .
. 1,215 21
Rutland, .
1 • «
23 63
Norwood,
861 14
Salem, .... 8,100 68
Oakham, .
9 50
Salisbury,
381 15
Orange, .
807 56
Sandisfield, .
36 48
Orleans, .
. 1,259 90
Sandwich,
485 86
Otis, ...
25 48
Saugus, .
668 65
Oxford, .
236 26
Savoy,
Scitnate, .
46 46
271 66
Pklmer, •
229 11
Seekonk, .
99 31
Paxton, •
22 39
Sharon, .
325 14
Peabody, .
. 4,361 54
Sheffield, .
117 60
Pelham, .
11 43
Shelburne,
343 53
Pembroke,
103 66
Sherbom,
375 44
Pepperell,
. 896 49
Shirley, .
190 47
Peru,
14 40
Shrewsbury, .
383 96
Petersham,
. 368 15
Shutesbury, .
25 60
Phillipston,
120 52
Somerset,
934 99
Plttsfield,
. 2,024 23
Somerville,
3,591 03
Phinfield,
48 81
South Hadley, .
•
2,851 88
Pljmoath,
. 1,890 38
Southampton, .
244 35
P]jmpton,
98 09
Southborough,
427 11
Prescott, .
59 16
South bridge, .
240 83
Princeton,
. 268 28
Southwick,
308 27
Pn>vinoetown, .
. 523 98
Spencer, .
Springfield, ,
1,827 21
6,208 12
Qoinqr, .
. 1,526 83
Sterling, ,
Stockbridge, .
456 65
976 52
Randolph,
. 2,631 41
Stoneham,
548 66
Bajnbam,
. 2,186 76
Stoughton,
692 12
Reading, .
. 617 72
Stow,
147 31
Reboboth,
68 64
Stnrbridge,
274 46
Rerere, •
57 51
Sudbury, .
897 79
Richoiood,
187 08
Sunderland, ,
145 46
Rochester,
183 14
Sutton, .
255 10
Rockland,
296 22
Swampscott,
. 1,863 91
Rockport,
. 1,109 54
Swanzey, .
577 20
148
TAX (X)MMISSIONER'S REPORT.
TauDton, ...
. .td,041 46
West Bridgcwat^r, .
. $456 88
TeropletOD> . . .
. 1,815 84
West Brool(field, .
256 70
Tewksbury, .
878 88
West Newbury,
. 1,088 34
Tisbury, .
284 20
West Springfield, .
. 2,105 49
Tolland, .
.
West Stockbridge, .
401 92
Topsfield,
284 41
West Tisb^ry,
284 84
TownseDd,
582 89
Westborough, .
684 87
Truro,
243 42
Westfield,
1 «
667 97
Tyngsborough,
102 49
Westford,
662 98
Tyringham, .
164 18
VVestbampton,
851 00
Westminster, .
464 12
Upton, .
225 06
Weston, .
. 2,466 28
Uxbridge,
868 80
Westport,
. 1,828 81
Weymouth,
. 1,868 96
Wakefield,
993 78
Whately,.
. 1,015 97
Wales, . . . ,
16 08
Whitman,
481 78
Walpole, .
455 10
Wilbraham. .
828 58
Waltham,
, 1,888 20
Williamsburg,
906 11
Ware, . . . .
488 68
Williamstown,
635 05
Wareham,
448 29
Wilmington, .
-
Warren, . . . ,
826 94
Winchendon, .
594 49
Warwick,
179 81
Winchester, .
942 48
Washington, .
-
Windsor,.
7 30
Watertown, .
870 12
Winthrop,
517 75
Wayland,
781 80
Woburn, . . . .
8,452 09
Webster, . . . .
547 70
Worcester,
9,482 21
Wellesley,
2,602 85
Worthington, ,
86 47
Wellfleet,
502 18
*
Wrentham,
657 11
Wendell,
-
Wenharo,
268 47
Yarmouth,
1,874 38
West BoylstoD, . •
181 22
1895-3
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 16.
149
TABLE E.
BANK OHABOBS.
Abmgton,
. tl,159 69
Fairbay en,
. (1,036 26
Ad&ms, . • • <
. 2,871 65
Fall River,
. 22,433 50
Amesbury,
2,502 99
Falmouth,
140 43
Amherst, . • . . .
1368 39
Fitchburg, • .
. 12^19 23
AndoTer, . • . .
2,163 55
Framingham, .
. 2,549 65
Arlington,. . .. .
145 39
Franklin,.
. 1,521 11
Ashbumham, •
133 65
■
Athol, . . . .
2.665 35
Gardner, .
630 07
Attleborough, •
903 37
Georgetown, .
545 34
Ayer, . • . .
562 26
Gloucester,
. 4,193 93
Barnstable,
Barre,
Beverly, . • . .
541 97
. 863 83
. 1,747 94
Grafton, .
Great Harrington, .
Greenfield,
629 44
. 1,226 12
. 5,354 11
Boston, . • . .
Brockton,
Brookllne,
587,818 71
3.819 70
340 14
Harwich, .
Haverhill,
Hingham,
. 3,988 21
. 10,938 50
. 1,059 02
Cambridge,
Canton, . - • •
Chelsea, . • • .
Cbioopee,
. 7,372 24
2,690 04
. 3,163 30
. 2,086 80
Holliston,
Holyoke, .
t
Uopkinton,
Hudson, .
.' 675 68
. 13.361 00
. 1,286 48
503 89
•
ClintoD, .
•
Concord, .
. 1,660 82
937 52
Ipswich, .. .. .,
476 61
Conwaj, . - . .
1,119 69
Lawrence,
.. 37,935 93
Danvers, .
. 1,080 63
Lee, .
. 8,896 11
Dedham, • •
. 2,985 66
Leicester,
. 1,242 41
Lenox, .
348 89
Easthampton^ .
. 2,313 96
Leominster,
. 1,289 66
£a*iton, .
. 376 27
Lowell, .
. 16.639 64
Edgartown,
. 384 01
Lynn,
. 12,192 85
150
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Maiden, .
Marblehead,
Marlborough,
Melrose, .
Merrimac,
Methuen, .
Middleborough
Milford, .
Millbury,
Milton, .
Monson, .
Montague,
Nantucket,
Natick, .
New Bedford,
Newburyport,
Newton, .
North Adams,
North Attleborough
Northampton,
Northborough,
Northbridge,
Orange, .
Oxford, .
Palmer, .
Peabody, .
Fittsfield,
Plymouth,
Provincetown,
Quincy, .
Beading, .
f 1,601 77
Rockland,
1,916 66
Bockport,
2,020 26
726 84
Salem,
1,808 70
Shelbume,
988 69
Somenille,
109 60
Southbridge,
6,079 66
Spencer, ,
2,464 97
Springfield,
1,084 67
Stoc'kbridge,
1,627 62
Stoneham,
2,104 19
Taunton, .
284 40
Town send,
889 91
41,812 04
Uxbridge,
6,707 96
1,296 64
Wakefield,
6,400 88
Waltham,
820 61
Ware,
14,960 64
Wareham,
788 61
Watertown,
180 46
Webster, .
1.216 74
Westborough,
Westfield,
1,064 16
Westminster,
1,300 92
4,087 07
9,766 00
6,408 47
2,181 86
Weymouth,
Whitman,
Williamstown,
Winchendon,
Woburn, .
Worcester,
8,191 62
Wrentham,
199 48
Yarmouth,
t888 01
727 04
21381 69
1,112 68
889 32
2,247 10
1,016 67
84,764 48
2,080 76
260 96
18,641 66
862 04
691 26
1,061 42
1,276 46
8,873 18
626 02
796 96
888 96
690 66
4,166 42
652 18
6,610 66
881 98
360 70
2,022 98
1,244 49
27,068 41
426 87
2,180 97
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
151
TABLE P.
Statement of Ships and Vessels engaged in the Foreign Carrying Trade^
May 2 J 189-4 ^ as returned to the Tax Commissioner^ showing the Valua-
tion^ Income^ Reduction of Taxable Values^ and the Awx>unt credited to
Cities and Towns under the Provisions of Sections 8^ 9 and 10 of
Chapter 11 oftlie Public Statutes.
CITY OB TOWV.
• Yalnation.
Income.
Taxable l^osa to
Town.
Amoont
Benindf^ to
Town.
Barnstable, . • . .
16,600 00
(802 00
15,798 00
$63 67
BcwtoD, .
230,995 00
3,500 04
227,494 96
2,801 93
Brewster,
2,600 00
-
2,500 00
32 35
Chatham,
8,833 00
800 00
3,033 00
51 38
Dennis, .
39,752 00
2,964 00
36,788 00
394 03
Everett, .
8,750 00
475 00
8,275 00
127 59
Harwich,
11,900 00
-
11,900 00
164 77
Maiden, .
6,800 00
-
6,800 00
106 73
New Bedford,
110,721 00
6,455 00
104,266 00
1,623 26
Kewbaryport,
107.217 00
114 82
107,102 18
1,663 45
Newton, .
76,408 00
1,851 27
74,666 73
1,086 39
Plymoath,
2,750 00
-
2,750 00
46 27
Provincetown,
82,677 70
858 92
31,718 78
606 09
Somerset,
18,000 00
18,000 00
256 51
TaoDton, •
11,820 00
1,016 50
10,803 50
190 02
Tislmry, .
2.684 00
-
2,584 00
30 92
Warebam,
52,200 00
1,305 00
50,895 00
718 93
Watertown, .
•
9,700 00
-
9,700 00
145 32
Wellesleyt
•
62,000 00
-
52,000 00
567 49
Wellfleet,
■
33,434 00
3,644 00
29,790 00
227 25
West Newbury,
•
5,849 00
346 00
5,603 00
62 91
1825390 70
t23,632 55
(802,258 15
(10,967 25
TAX COMMISSIONER'S EEPOET.
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
187
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1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
\ ii|S,.i
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190
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT -No. 16.
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TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
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1^
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1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 18.
§111, .,1.1 ^ i.i......
I i.iiiii.ii.,
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
2® |2
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196
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
TABLE H.
Statement of the Valuation of each City and Toum^ and the Total Valuatio^i
of the Statey <w derived from the Table of Aggregates returned to the
Secretary of the Commonwealth^ with the Amount oj Debt of ea/t^ City
and Toum returned to the Tax Commissioner^ both for the date of May ly
1894 J with the Percentage of Debt on »mc^ Valuation j a Statement of
Sinking Funds^ where they exists what action^ if any^ ha^ been taken
under Chapter 133 of the Acts of 1882^ so far as returns have been
made to the Tax Commissioner.
City or Towh.
yaliMtion.
IndebtedneM.
Per-
centage.
Sinking Funds.
Action onder Act of 1882.
Abington.
Acton, .
Acushnet,
Adams, .
Agawam,
Alford, .
Amesbury,
Amherst,
Andover,
Arlington,
Ashburnhara,
Ashby, .
Ashfield,
Ashland,
Athol, .
Attleborough,
Auburn, .
Avon, .
Ayer, .
Barnstable,
Barre, •
Becket, .
Bedford,
92,314,658
1,483,425
619,280
8,718,589
1,292,855
185,149
4,925,884
3,122,531
4,468,750
7,552,924
1,074,929
491,187
489,191
1,194,292
8,695,240
4,468,751
548,593
782,261
1,354,910
3,671,885
1,439,751
416,050
992,857
1166,000
2.800
146,800
36,199
150,646
116,650
211,500
312,016
24,773
402
5.200
16,700
98.700
811,930
4,844
.071
.001
.039
.028
.030
.037
.047
.041
.023
.010
.013
.025
.069
.008
66,000 I .088
78,648 .058
7,023 .004
23,000 .023
f 44,960 j
-{
2,648
14,863
71,268
- !
3,282 \
\ \
2,412 1
Raised f6,000 current
year.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Applied $5,600 for cur-
rent year.
A sum appropriated
each year to meet
notes.
Applied 19,793.37 for
current year.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Voted to raise and ap-
propriate $1,500.
Raised f 1,400 for cur-
rent year.
Voted to raise and
apply $7,280.
Bank and corporation
tax and unexpended
balance.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No, 16.
197
Statement of Valiuition — Continued.
CiTT 0« Town.
Yaloatioii.
IndebtedneM.
Per-
centage.
Sinking Funds.
Action under Act of 1882.
Belcbertown,
Bellingham,
Belmont,
Berkley,
Berlin, •
Bemardston,
Beverly,
Billeriea,
Blackstone,
Blandford,
Bolton, .
Boston, .
Bourne, .
Box borough,
Boxford,
Boylston,
Bradford,
Braintree,
Brewster,
Bridgewater,
Brim field,
Brockton,
Brook field,
Brookline,
Buckland,
Burlington,
Cambridge,
Canton, .
Carlisle,
Carver, .
Cbarlcmont,
Charlton,
Chatham,
Chelmsford,
Chelsea, .
Cheshire,
Chester, .
Chesterfield,
Chicopee,
Chilmark,
Clarksburg,
Oioton, .
Cohasset,
$826,190
686,495
3,638,716
388,308
486,801
368,994
13,824,387
1,792,869
2,620,290
430,380
473,110
928,109,042
1,667,475
236,619
643,430
516,787
2,476,991
4,177,425
666,406
2,283,730
406,600
21,468,981
1,346,052
67,191,160
527.161
616,669
77,535,620
3386384
346,640
773,214
347,533
919,120
823,422
1,955,085
22,165,064
701,890
642,605
287,626
7,943,420
215,179
223364
6,927,124
4,169,210
•1,722
.002
88,500
.024
1,000
.002
815,600
10,600
17,200
4,000
.058
.005
.006
.009
54,418,535
1,000
.058
2,900
4,000
91,700
340,900
1,776
.004
.007
.037
.081
.003
1,664,800
19,623
.077
.014
2,165,685
.037
8,800
f,180
4,077,500
.016
.013
.062
145,000
.037
1,750
.005
1,000
.001
6,600
.018
37,250
.045
1,158,200
.052
12,133
.017
2,750
.009
437,625
.065
5,000
379,000
.022
.054
64,500
.016
- !
•180,542
20,908,860
24,500
151,000
429,123 \
1,319,682
- i
23,626
- !
- i
2,200
49,704
- 5
Voted to raise f 625.
Proportional annual
payments.
Voted to pay only the
interest.
No action taken.
Raise $2,000 annually.
Voted to raise f 500.
No action taken.
No action taken.
About $11,000.
Voted to raise $6,000.
Applied $62,600 for
current year.
Voted to pay when due.
No action taken.
Appropriated $10,000
for current year.
No action taken.
Applied $1,000 for cur-
rent year
No action taken.
Applied $1,000 for cur-
rent year.
Voted to raise and ap-
ply $1,000. .
Applied $500 for cur-
rent year.
Paid $1,000.
Pays $500 annually.
Voted to raise $6,400
annually.
198
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Statement oj Valuation — Continued.
CiTT OS TOWH.
yaluAtlon.
iDdebtednMt.
Per-
oenUge.
sinking Fands.
Action ander Act of U82.
Col rain, .
•552,299
fl,000
.001
_
^
Concord,
8.793,732
135,900
.086
f50,458
-
Conway,
694,311
11,484
.016
- i
Raised $1,000 for cur-
rent year.
Cottage City, .
1,637,800
28,481
.018
^
—
Cummington,
296,835
2,000
.006
—
No action taken.
Dalton, .
2,303,916
—
—
—
-
Dana,
293,929
3,600
.011
-
—
Danyers,
4,416,810
273,546
.061
68,200
-
Dartmouth, .
2,412,976
20,000
.008
- j
Voted to assess 15,000
annually.
Dedham,
6,111,060
21,000
.003
- 5
Applied $8,000 for cur-
rent year.
Deerfield,
1,679,996
66,400
.035
•>.
No action taken.
Dennis, .
1,365,317
3,300
.002
- J
Applied $500 for cur-
rent year.
Dighton,
769,754
8,000
.003
- 1
Annual payment of
$800.
Douglas,
1,038,000
9,000
.008
—
No action taken.
Doyer, .
833,933
—
-
—
-
Dracut, .
• 1,730,229
20,000
.011
—
No action taken.
Dudley, .
1,046,010
7,000
.006
- \
Raised and applied
$2,000 current y^ar.
Dunstable,
283,478
—
-
^
—
Duxbury,
1,445,397
48,000
.088
-
Pays $3,000 annually.
K. Bridgewater,
1,461,092
2,000
.001
—
Pays $5(X) annually.
Kastham,
267,251
1,000
.003
-
No action taken.
Easthnmpton,
2,471,299
67,000
.027
•- 1
$3,600 to be paid this
year.
Easton, .
4,656,069
-
'
w
Edgartown, .
705,158
3,145
.004
—
-
Egremont,
436,664
1,714
.003
—
No action taken.
Enfield, .
607,260
2,000
.003
—
No action taken.
Erying, .
381,901
4,000
.010
- j
Applied $600 for cur-
rent year.
Applied $3,000 for cur-
rent year.
Applied $8300 for cur-
rent year.
Apply $2,000 annually.
Essex, .
878,134
31,163
.036
- \
Eyerett, .
12,509,700
473,700
.037
85,064 1
Fairhayen,
1,793,910
3,000
.001
—
Fall River, .
63,638,563
4,873,282
.076
1,673,694
-
Falmouth,
5,661,887
—
—
—
—
Fitchburg,
18,463,116
1,467,500
.078
147,284
-
Florida,
167,241
1,700
.010
—
No action taken.
Foxborough, .
1,611,770
9,000
.006
—
No action taken.
Framingham,.
8,124,391
251,000
.030
40,000
-
Franklin,
2,760,752
21,632
.007
: i
Voted to pay 10 per
cent, annually.
Freetown,
812,537
7,913
.009
Raises $460 annually.
Gardner,
4,746,001
103,966
.021
-
—
Gay Head,
23,894
1,002
.041
-
No action taken.
Georgetown, .
992,620
11,500
.011
^
^
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16,
199
Statement of Vaittation — Continaed.
CiTT OS Tows.
Taloatloii.
GUI,
Gloucester,
Goshen, •
Gosnold,
Grafton, .
Granby, .
Granville,
Great Barring
ton,
Greenfield,
Greenwich,
Groton, .
GroTeland,
Hadley, .
Halifax, .
Hamilton,
Hampden,
Hancock,
Hanover,
Hanson, .
Hard wick.
Harvard,
Harwich,
Hatfield,
Haverhill,
Hawley, .
Heath, .
Hingbam,
HinSdale,
Holbrook,
Holden, .
Holland,
HoUiston,
Holyoke,
Hopedale,
Hopkinton,
Habbardston,
Hadson, .
Hull, .
Huntington,
Hyde Park,
•462,656
16,621,178
187,622
222,747
2,362,760
426,209
341,992
3,811,490
6,086,162
257,616
2,782,663
946,299
966,455
267,038
1,108,102
410,571
328,880
1,180,726
620390
1,466,120
898,956
1,073.790
9.S8,445
20,436,306
148,078
187,663
3,953,887
692,236
1,124,141
1,202,904
90,597
1,622,147
26.754,765
1,704,672
2,116,069
661,366
2333,377
2,881,306
607,910
8,631,630
IndebtednMt.
Per-
centage.
Sinking Funds.
Action under Act of 188S.
16,300
303,960
1,000
79,000
2,000
9,000
80,430
47,200
9,000
23,850
68,123
19,500
30,600
1,396,300
1,800
58,600
36,500
26,492
25,666
150
20,000
1,491,500
4,862
224,200
9,600
180.200
57,500
16,177
88,600
.011
.019
.007
.033
.004
.002
.009
.009
.003
.026
.070
.016
.020
.068
.012
.014
.052
.023
.021
.001
.012
.055
.002
.105
.014
.045
.019
•031
.004
•119,083
40
- s
7,900
191,075
19,619
- \
426,219
145,171
- !
2,500
Applied •SOO for cur-
rent year.
Raised ^3,600 for cur-
rent year.
Pays •1,500 annually.
Applied 1250 for cur-
rent jear.
No action taken.
Applies all sums in
excess of appropria-
tions.
Applies |7,000 annu-
ally.
Applied •3,000 for
cun*ent year.
Applies •l.OOO an-
nually.
Voted to pay f 2,000.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Applied 12,000 for
current year.
Pays 13,000 annually.
Raises • 2.000 an-
nually.
Applied •7,000 for
current year.
Voted to raise and
apply ^1,000.
Applied 16,500 for
current year.
200
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Statement of Valuation — Continued.
CiTT OB TOWK.
Valnatioii.
Indebtedness.
Per-
centage.
Sinking Fands.
Action under Aet of 1881.
Ipswich,.
Kingston,
Lake vi lie,
Lancaster,
Lanesborough,
Lawrence,
Lee,
I^icester,
Lenox, .
Leominster,
Leverett,
Lexington,
Ley den, .
Lincoln, .
Littleton,
Longmeadow,
Lowell, .
Ludlow, .
Lunenburg,
Lynn,
Lynnfield,
Maiden, .
Manchester,
Mansfield,
Marblehead,
Marion, .
Marlborough,
Marshfield,
Mashpee,
Mattapoisett,
Maynard,
Meafield,
Medford,
Medway,
Melrose,
Mendon,
Merrimac,
Methuen,
Middleboro',
•2,797,780
1,481,690
500,588
3,014,371
511,304
33,436,593
1,776,510
2,069,066
3,031,094
5,371,514
283,164
4,014,055
162,220
2,243,091
856,889
1,122,560
69,084,241
1,047,147
764,133
49,459,971
608.754
22,124,976
6,695,679
1,788,274
5,468,130
778,340
8,310,714
1,234,830
187,970
1,453,710
2,116,348
1,289,674
15,289,350
1,246.896
9,924,873
537,175
1,311,224
3,472,226
3,833,346
•16,940
.006
34,000
.023
1,350
.002
43.000
.014
5,864
1,978,000
10.000
.011
.059
.005
19,692
.009
36,000
279,274
.011
.051
45,700
2,767
30,000
9,867
.011
.017
.018
.011
3,440,400
.049
5,000
3,660,900
4,700
.006
.074
.007
1,105,964
.049
138,000
.020
40,000
.022
294,000
.053
757,456
55,000
2,000
.091
.044
.010
132,000
4,260
.062
.003
430,591
.028
10,032
.008
428,800
.043
25,337
82,205
173,465
.019
.023
.046
-{
- 1
•364.088
: \
1,000
8,830
612,564^
618,677
54,462 j
1.414 j
: \
104,567
8,920
4,000
68.260
11,635
17,760
•500 to be raised and
applied the current
year.
Raised •3.500 for cur-
rent year.
No action taken.
Voted to raise ^3,000
and interest for cur-
rent year.
No action taken.
•4,000 to be applied
for current year.
Pays 12,600 annually.
No action taken.
Raised and applied
•161,590 for cur-
rent year.
No action taken.
Pays f 1,000 annually.
Applied 1^5,400 for
current year.
No action taken.
Raised ^700 for cur-
rent year.
Applies fli*^^ ^^•
nually.
No action taken.
Pays •IdO annually.
Applied 15,353.40 for
current year.
Applied |l,900 for
current year.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
201
Statement of Valuation — Continued.
CiTT OB TOWV.
Valuation.
Middlefield,
Middleton,
Milford, .
Millbury,
Mil I is, .
Milton, .
Monroe, .
MoDson,
Montague,
Monterey,
Montgomery,
MtWashingto
Nahant, .
Nantucket,
Natick, .
Needham,
New Ashford,
New Bedford,
New Braintree,
New Marlboro',
New Salem, .
Newbury,
Newbury port,
Newton,.
Norfolk,
North Adams,
N. Andover, .
N. AUleboro\
N. Brookfield,
N. Reading, .
Northampton,
Northborough,
Northbridge,
Nonhfield,
Norton, .
Norwell,
Norwood,
Oakham,
Orange, .
Orleans, .
Otis, .
Oxford, .
Palmer, .
Paxton, .
Peabody,
1209,165
636,374
6,277,778
2,299,557
852,325
18,746,610
142,758
1,739,373
3,547,262
224,906
142,185
81,291
4,792,353
3,006,229
5,482,150
2,763,196
68,695
51,434,925
437,375
546,717
293,470
965,010
9,739,177
44,000,185
515,271
7,204,905
2^40,171
3,826,961
1,745,340
582,842
10,092,479
1,227,790
2,694,208
870,840
778,616
885^37
2,990,270
337,212
2,807,160
551,146
211,609
1,248,477
2,721,478
283,166
7,642,100
Indebtedness.
Per-
centage.
Sinking Funds.
$3,940
86,600
45,000
12,000
976
af,788
58,820
5,016
400
264,404
146,750
265
1,964,184
. 2,486
4,217
2,500
7,500
463,888
2,734,326
558,500
348,727
139,000
7,000
455,160
60,530
16,000
4,100
1,000
7,408
108,000
1,500
217,975
12,*70
3,000
20,412
259,761
.007
.016
.019
.014
.006
.002
.016
.022
.002
.046
.062
.003
.038
.005
.007
.008
.007
.046
.062
.077
.091
.079
.013
.045
.049
.006
.004
.001
.008
.036
.004
.077
.022
.002
.007
.034
- !
•18,920
40,232
281,003 j
29,512
578,093
37
.682 J
25,338
17,118
- !
13,284
- \
Action nnder Act of 1882.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Voted to raise $2,000
for current year.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Applied $71,120 for
current year.
No action taken.
Applied 116,267.60 for
current year.
Raised and applied
$11,000 for current
year.
$9,000 to be paid this
year.
No action taken.
Raises $1,000 annually.
No action taken.
Proportional annual
payments.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
24 132 J i APP^i«<^ ♦2,400
' ( I current year.
for
202
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Statement of Valuation — Continaed.
CiTT OK Tow.
Pelham, .
Pembroke,
Pepperell,
Peru,
Petersham,
Phillipston,
Pittsfield,
Plainfield,
Plymouth,
Plympton,
Prescott«
Princeton,
Provincetown,
Quincy, .
Randolph,
Raynham,
Reading,
Rehoboth,
Revere, .
Richmond,
Rochester,
Rockland,
Rockport,
Rowe, .
Rowley,
Royalston,
Russell, .
Rutland,
Salem, .
Salisbury,
Sandisfield,
Sandwich,
Saugus, .
Savoy, .
Scituate,
Seekonk,
Sharon, .
Sheffield,
Shelburne,
Sherborn,
Shirley, .
Shrewsbury,
Shutesbury,
Somerset,
Somerville,
ValDation.
IndeMedneM.
Per-
centage.
Sinking Fnnde.
Action ander Aet <tf 1883.
•173,147
661,396
1,939,700
116,996
699,772
807,883
12,866,386
160,091
6,338,926
306,638
162,667
829,909
2,079,602
16,817,466
1,870,660
777,868
3,448,208
729,146
6,699,430
340,394
616,467
2,963,893
2,698,272
186,372
636,168
618,946
612,825
618,863
28,316,700
606,836
347,664
898,260
2,947,766
161,800
2,038,886
903,660
1,672.643
866,299
902,841
838,264
718,868
1,003,102
166,786
1,019,133
44,088,900
•3,000
.017
3,194
.004
25,000
.012
8,000
.009
682,000
.053
481
.003
234,977
.037
5,000
.006
108,800
.049
1,084,630
.064
196,076
.104
172,212
.049
166,260
.023
600
.001
800
.001
147,600
.049
100,000
.038
300
.001
16,380
.025
6,600
.010
17,900
.034
1,092,600
.038
3,320
.006
1,802
.006
11,617
.012
170,420
.067
600
.003
63,600
.031
2,000
.002
17,678
.011
1,600
.001
7,000
.007
4,668
.006
14,063
.014
33
—
21,800
.020
1,269,600
.028
•167,652
: \
- \
27,408 j
106,049
44,200
- 1
1,000
- 1
No action taken.
No action taken.
Pays 13,000 annually.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Applied 118,920 for
current year.
No action taken.
Applied ^8,600 and
interest for current
year
Applied 926,000 tor
current year.
Applied •3,576 for
current year.
No action taken.
Applied 97,500 for cur-
rent year.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Raises • 1 ,000 annually.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
No action taken.
Voted to raise 9400
annually.
Applied 1100,000 for
current year.
1805.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
203
Statement of Valuation — Continued.
CITT OK Town.
ValQAtlon.
IndebtediMM.
Per-
sinking Fandi.
Action ander Aet of 188S.
South Hadley
, 11,987,240
•68,680
.031
Southampton,
489,919
-
—
-
-
Southborougfa
I, . 1,409,616
7,600
.005
5 Applies 12,000 annu-
} ally.
South bridge,
. ' 3,621,452
88,620
.026
$60,796
V
South wick.
. i 609,676
6,842
.010
760
—
Spencer,
. 8,833,566
423,071
.110
140,884 j
Applied 16,000 for cur-
rent year.
Springfield,
. 66,449,425
1,913,000
.033
99,466
-
Sterling,
843,445
8,622
.010
-
-
Stockbridge,
. I 2,940,495
11,788
.004
—
—
Stoneham,
1
4,018,167
96,600
.028
- <
Voted to pay |5,000
annually.
Stoughton,
2,819,262
50,000
.017
-
—
Stow,
668.720
—
—
-
—
Sturbridge,
. 1 938,180
2,000
.002
-
No action taken.
Sudbury,
1,116,646
8,500
.007
— <
Applied f 2,000 for cur-
rent year.
Sunderland,
412,960
—
—
—
-
Sutton, .
. 1,296,678
11,500
.008
—
No action taken.
Swampscott,
6,149,200
71,666
.013
<
Applied $4,500 for cur-
rent year.
Swanzey,
816,129
10,816
.018
-
No action taken.
Taunton,
. 18,987,964
1,690,947
.089
786,917
-
Templeton,
Tewtsburv,
1,248,460
32,363
.026
—
—
1,478,668
8,400
.006
i-
No action taken.
Tisbury,
799,121
4,346
.005
- 5
Raised $600 for cur-
rent jear.
Tolland,
140,687
5,542
.089
-
No action taken.
Topsfield,
888,065
6,300
.007
—
No action taken.
Townsend,
1,118,966
13,600
.012
- <
Raised $1,600 for cur-
rent year.
Truro, .
831^43
2,000
.006
—
No action taken.
Tyngsboro', .
•
382,078
7,000
.018
- <
Applied $1,306 for cur-
rent year.
Tyringham, .
208,370
—
—
—
—
Upton, .
969,501
10,060
.010
- <
Voted to pay $260 for
current year.
Uxbridge,
2.165306
46,500
.021
2,850
-
Wakefield, .
6,817,086
72,707
.012
—
Pays $4,000 annually.
Wales, .
277,435
—
—
-
-
Walpole,
2,069,434
10,400
.006
—
—
Waltham,
18,766,060
1,344,750
.071
281^87
-
Ware, .
4,084,880
146,300
.035
- \
Applied $14,400 for
current year.
Wareham,
1,921,329
19,276
.010
- 1
Applied $2,800 for cur-
rent year.
Applied $6,980 for cur-
rent year.
Warren,
2,688,690
22,176
.008
- 1
Warwick,
306,970
—
-
—
—
WacihingtoD, .
199,720
460
.002
No action taken.
204
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
Statement of VahuUion — Concladed.
CtTT OR Town.
ValiuUon.
Watertown,
Wayland,
Webster,
Wellesley,
Wellfleet,
Wendell,
Wenham,
West Boylston,
W. Bridge water
W.Brookfield, i
West Newbury,
W. Springfield,
W.Stoekbridge,
West Tisbury,
Westborougn,
Westfield,
Westford,
Westhampton
Westminster,
Weston, .
Westport,
Weymouth,
Whately,
Whitman,
Wilbraham,
Williamsburg,
Williamstown,
Wilmington, .
Winchendon, .
Winchester, .
Windsor,
Winthrop,
Wobum,
Worcester,
Worthington,.
Wrentham, .
Yarmouth,
•8,216,400
1,496,120
3,124,707
6,547,622
611,063
232,100
673,850
1,247,060
968,268
763,022
883,582
3,810,510
491,384
380,288
2,712^98
7,621,667
1,146,688
234,584
706,323
2,892,950
1,464,500
6,488,432
411,065
3,625,594
744,651
878,049
2,566,130
983,624
2,262,297
6,206,125
193,251
4,573,560
9,464,154
86,397,576
301,771
1,447,747
1,970,777
Indebtedness.
Per-
oentsge.
Sinking Funds.
Action under Act of 188S.
•2,471,521,505
•138,500
74,500
•287,000
1,000
8,000
3,200
16,000
11,700
4,350
113,800
206,100
311,200
189
19,000
527,979
2,660
136,000
10,500
37,000
8.750
24,088
406,000
68,500
450,619
4.325,000
2,668
•120,250,102
.016
.049
.043
.001
.034
.004
.012
.015
.004
.029
.075
.040
.006
.081
.006
.037
.011
.014
.009
.010
.065
.•014
.047
.050
.001
•11,663
39,531
3,792
500
- !
47,450
: 1
\ \
- \
15,000
■{
Raised ^500 for cur-
rent year.
Applied the interest
for cun*ent year.
To be paid in ten
annual payments.
Raised ^600 for cur-
rent year.
Applied ^6,000 for
cun*ent year.
Raised ^30,000 for
current year.
Applied •I ,500 for
current year.
Voted to pay •1,160
for current year.
No action taken.
Raised and applied
•750 for current
year.
Assessed •2,500 for
current year.
Applied • 18,500 for
current year.
9,752
8 125 J ' -^PP^'®<^ ^19,1 16.67
• ( , for current year.
1,636,712
•32,463.184
1895-] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16. 205
Total indebtedness without trust funds, . . . tl^>2^>102
Trust funds 4,620,424
Total liability, 1124,770^26
Total assets, including trust funds, $190,681,196
From this table it appears that, —
■
71 towns have no indebtedness.
10^ towns have less than one per cent.
60 towns have one per cent, and less than two per cent.
28 tawns have two per cent, and less than three per cent.
28 towns have three per cent and less than four per cent.
21 towns have four per cent, and less tlian five per cent.
16 towns have five per cent, and less than six per cent.
7 towns have six per cent, and less than seven per cent.
11 towns have seven per cent, and less that eight per cent.
4 towns have eight per cent, and less than nine per cent.
2 towns have nine per cent, and less than ten per cent.
2 towns have ten per cent, and less than eleven per cent.
1 town has eleven per cent, and less than twelve per cent.
206
TAX CX)MMISSIONER*S REPORT.
[Jan,
Sinking Funds Reported,
CITY OR TOWN.
1891.
189S.
1S98.
1S94.
Amesbury,
$18,000
•26,806
$35,952
144,960
Andover, .
1,200
1,776
2,107
2,648
Arlington,
32,536
32,536
5,070
14,863
Attleborough, ,
40,545
47,591
62,961
71,268
Ayer,
1,661
2,000
2,500
3,282
Bedford, .
—
3,141
1,923
2,412
Beverly, .
805,475
340,693
377,169
180,642
Blackstone,
65,520
63,930
—
—
Boston,
24,619,341
25,569,706
25,999,268
20,908,860
Braintree, .
6,120
8,551
19,500
24,500
Brockton, .
84,024
115,160
131,116
151,<>00
Brookline,
314,909
391,000
375,134
429,123
Cambridge,
1,316,660
1,466,146
1,374,299
1,319,682
Chelsea, .
642,800
6,060
—
23,626
Chicopee, .
—
2,064
2,064
2,200
Clinton, .
28,000
35,380
42,844
49,704
Concord, .
29.317
36,124
43,373
50,458
Danvers, .
42,969
47,964
53,000
58,200
Everett, .
52,737
59,498
23,112
35,064
Fall River,
1,434,116
1,683,679
1,534,367
1,673,694
Fitchburff,
Framingham, ,
400,055
241,452
308,742
147,284
20.085
23,687
37,000
40,000
Gloucester,
45,663
64,971
88,808
119,083
Goshen, .
218
426
40 '
40
Hardwick,
4,162
6,000
7,600
7,900
Haverhill,
76,922
105,641
142,162
191,076
Hoi brook, .
10,245
13,000
16,078
19,619
Ilolyoke, .
267,471
317,687
370,694
426,219
Hopkinton,
Hull,
109,040
120,400
131,661
145,171
26,474
26,474
26,474
2,600
Hyde Park,
133,277
141,822
160,882
-
Lawrence,
366,099
431,267
491,068
364,088
Leominster,
^
.
1,000
Lincoln, .
8,180
8,012
8,347
8,830
Lowell,
733,231
884,149
883,784
612,564
Lvnn,
Maiden, .
492,115
467,179
608,201
618,677
37,174
65,063
81,327
54,462
Mansfield,
—
.
700
1,414
Marlborough, ,
44,658
61,916
99,874
104,657
Marshiield,
200
6,700
5,678
8,920
Maynard, .
—
—
2,000
4,000
Medford, .
16,765
25,414
39,440
58,260
Melrose, .
48,992
12,761
4,331
11,635
Merrimac,
11,112
13,367
22,450
17,766
Montague,
12,000
13,276
16,767
18,920
Natick,
30,819
21,363
27,496
40,232
1«95.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
207
Sinking Funds Seported — Conolnded.
CITY OB TOWN.
IMl.
189a.
laas.
ISM.
New Bedford, .
tll3,316
•202,262
•273,014
•281,003
Xewbaryport, .
19355
31^65
28,310
29,612
Newton, .
362,866
432,622
480,132
578,093
North Attleboroagh,
-
-
33,436
37,682
Northampton, .
195,063
—
12,500
26,338
Northborough, .
18,560
21,334
24,658
17,118
Norwood, .
8,407
6,680
10,063
13,284
Peabody, .
Pittsfiefd, .
71,011
82,418
21.087
24,132
123,902
137,873
152,464
167,662
Randolph,
14,523
18,668
23,000
27,408
Salem,
268,533
210,815
104,566
105,049
Saiigas, .
33,800
36,920
39,000
44,200
Somerset, .
—
-
15,000
1,000
South Hadley, .
12,889
13,441
3,708
-
Southbridge, .
28,500
41,038
44,437
50,796
Southwick,
3,179
280
1,042
760
Spencer, .
39,906
94.957
105,737
140,884
Springfield,
22,646
22,735
61,626
99,466
Taanton, .
574,738
628,276
719,662
786.917
Uxbridge, .
27,000
27,000
27,000
2,850
Waltham, .
142,611
146,927
195,197
231,537
Wayland, .
Wellesley,
7,889
9,385
10,666
11,663
21,337
26,894
33,093
39,631
Wendell, .
800
1,600
2,600
3,792
Wenham, .
—
-.
—
600
Westboroogh, .
31,511
37,062
41,953
47,450
Weymouth,
27.603
36,836
46.482
55,797
Whitman, .
7,738
10,009
12,362
16.000
WiDthrop,
•
4,000
5,551
7,625
9,762
Wobnrn, ...
95,193
109,750
38,779
8,125
Worcester,
1,170,737
1,274.072
1,403,166
1,636,712
•35,157,900
•36,568,060
•36,978,076
•32,463,184
210
TAX COMMISSIONER'S REPORT.
[Jan.
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 16.
211
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215
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT .... .... No. 19.
^ommontocalt^ of ^assac^nsttts.
AGGREGATES
OF
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, ETC.,
A8
Assessed May 1, 1894.
Compiled
By WILLIAM M. OLIN,
Secretabt of tqb Commonwealth.
BOSTON :
WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO., STATE PRINTERS,
18 Post Office Square.
1895.
C0mm0nfomIt]^ of Plassarl^usdts.
Office op the Secretary,
Boston, Nov. 21, 1894.
To the Honorable Senate
and the House of Represenlaiives.
The Thirty-fourth Annual Abstract of Polls, Property, Taxes,
etc., as assessed May 1, 1894, is herewith submitted, in accordance
with the provisions of section 57, chapter 11, Public Statutes.
The resoilts of a comparison of the returns of 1894 with those of
1893 are sHiown in the ** Comparative Statement," on pages 4, 5 and
6, and in "the ** Increase or Decrease," etc., in tabular form on pages
8 ti> 11 inclusive.
The "Aggregates," etc., '« during thirty-four years, 1861-1894,"
are printed on pages 60 to 63 inclusive. The reprinting of this
table in every report is of doubtful expediency, and it seems ad-
visable to present it hereafter only in ten-year periods, correspond-
ing to the State census decades.
Very respectfully,
WILLIAM M. OLIN,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc. [1894.
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT.
[Arranged in the same order as the colomna Id the Table of Aggregates.]
There were 30 cities and 822 towns in the Commonwealth, Ma}' 1,
1894.
This does not include the town of East Longmeadow, which was
incorporated July 1, 1894. See chapter 418, Acts and Resolves
of 1894.
Residents Assessed on Property. Individuals : increase 8,367 ;
22 cities, 174 towns increased ; 8 cities, 141 towns decreased ; 7
towns unchanged. All Others : increase 3,958 ; 22 cities, 132 towns
increased ; 7 cities, 112 towns decreased ; 1 city, 78 towns un-
changed. Total: increase 12,325; 27 cities, 188 towns increased;
3 cities, 125 towns decreased ; 9 towns unchanged.
Non-residents Assessed on Property. Individuals : increase
1,680; 19 cities, 179 towns increased; 11 cities, 122 towns de-
creased ; 21 towns unchanged. All Others : increase 550 ; 15 cities,
130 towns increased; 13 cities, 104 towns decreased; 2 cities, 88
towns unchanged. Total : increase 2,230 ; 24 cities, 190 towns in-
creased ; 6 cities, 11 1 towns decreased ; 21 towns unchanged.
Persons Assessed. On Property : increase 15,655 ; 28 cities,
205 towns increased; 2 cities, 110 towns decreased; 7 towns un-
changed. For Poll Tax only : decrease 585 ; 18 cities, 181 towns
increased ; 12 cities, 133 towns decreased ; 8 towns unchanged.
Total : increase 15,070 ; 22 cities, 209 towns increased ; 8 cities,
111 towns decreased ; 2 towns unchanged.
Male Polls: increase 2,531; 20 cities, 190 towns increased; 10
cities, 122 towns decreased ; 10 towns unchanged.
Rate of Tax on Male Polls: 30 cities, 322 towns unchanged.
Lowest rate, viz., *$1.00 assessed, as usual, in city of Chelsea,
* State tax; connty charges paid by city of Boston.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19. 5
towns of Revere and Winthrop, county of Suffolk ; highest rate,
viz., $2.00 assessed in 29 cities, 319 towns. Kate of $1.50 in the
town of Gay Head.
Personal Estate. Excluding Resident Bank Stock : decrease
$14,287,276; 11 cities, 100 towns increased; 19 cities, 222 towns
decreased. Resident Bank Stock : decrease $1,721,435; 11 cities,
30 towns increased ; 15 cities, 48 towns decreased ; 4 cities, 244
towns unchanged. Total: decrease $16,008,711; 11 cities, 100
towns increased ; 19 cities, 222 towns decreased.
Real Estate. Buildings: increase $36,156,668; 29 cities, 251
towns increased ; 1 city, 67 towns decreased ; 4 towns unchanged.
Land : increase $23,034,519 ; 29 cities, 172 towns increased ; 1 city,
147 towns decreased ; 3 towns unchanged. Total increase $59,-
191,187 ; 30 cities, 234 towns increased ; 88 towns decreased.
Total Valuation : increase $43,182,476 ; 28 cities, 184 towns in-
creased ; 2 cities, 138 towns decreased.
Tax. On Personal Estate: decrease $322,703; 10 cities, 112
towns increased ; 20 cities, 210 towns decreased. On Real Estate :
increase $834,970; 22 cities, 166 towns increased; 8 cities, 156
towns decreased. On Polls : increase $4,646 ; 20 cities, 190
towns increased; 10 cities, 122 towns decreased; 10 towns un-
changed. Total : increase $516,913 ; 19 cities, 156 towns increased ;
11 cities, 166 towns decreased.
Rate of Tax per $1,000: 10 cities, 116 towns increased; 17
cities, 158 towns decreased ; 3 cities, 48 towns unchanged. Highest
rate, viz., $25.00 assessed in town of Savoy, county of Berkshire.
Lowest rate, viz., $4.60 in town of Gosnold, county of Dukes
County. Rates from $6.00 to $9.50 assessed in 26 towns ; $10.00
to $14.80 in 5 cities and 142 towns; $15.00 to $19.70 in 25 cities
and 132 towns ; $20.00 to $24.00 in 20 towns.
Horses : increase 2,255 ; 16 cities, 209 towns increased ; 14 cities,
108 towns decreased ; 5 towns unchanged.
Cows : decrease 4,329 ; 13 cities, 108 towns increased ; 16 cities,
210 towns decreased ; 1 city, 4 towns unchanged.
Sheep: decrease 1,545; 2 cities, 107 towns increased; 6 cities,
129 towns decreased ; 19 cities, 66 towns no figures ; 3 cities, 20
towns unchanged.
Xeat Cattle, etc. : decrease 6,469 ; 8 cities, 77 towns in-
creased; 11 cities, 225 towns decreased; 8 cities, 13 towns no
figures ; 3 cities, 7 towns unchanged.
6 POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc. [1894.
Swine: increase 7,732 ; 14 cities, 221 towns increased ; 7 cities,
67 towns decreased ; 9 cities, 26 towns no figures ; 8 towns un-
changed.
Dwelling Houses: increased 10,474; 29 cities, 220 towns in-
creased ; 1 city, 70 towns decreased ; 32 towns unchanged.
Acres of Land: decreased 6,360; 9 cities, 116 towns increased;
10 cities, 87 towns decreased ; 11 cities, 119 towns unchanged.
Fowl. Number : decreased 100,541 ; 5 cities, 116 towns increased ;
11 cities, 112 towns decreased; 14 cities, 94 towns no figures; 14
cities, 94 towns no figures in 1893. Value : decreased $33,648 ; 6
cities, 117 towns increased; 9 cities, 111 towns decreased; 14 cities,
94 towns no figures ; 14 cities, 94 towns no figures in 1893 ; 1 city
unchanged.
STATISTICAL TABLES
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
1894. Increase or Decrease
COUNTIES.
Barnstable,
Berkshire,
Bristol, .
Dakes,
Franklin, .
Hampden,
Hampshire,
liiddlesex,
Nantaeket,
Norfolk, .
Plymouth,
Suffolk, .
Worcester,
State,.
Statk,
NUMBEB OT
RKSIDBNTS A88K88BI>
ON Pbopirtt.
Indi-
viduals.
All
Others,
<I86
810
432
d\
707
(f83
782
45
1,756
449
1,671
d655
1,182
1,258
M
127
867
6
1,418
<I12
8
(122
1,102
dOO
258
566
dbl
201
8,867 I 3,058
9,600 d 184
Total.
13
937
799
5
2,120
d45
735
28
2,858
850
1,029
11
1,181
1,459
12,825
9,406
NUMBBB OF NOK-
RBSmXBTS A88B89BD
OK Propbbtt.
Indi- , All
viduals.. Others.
Ndxbbb or Pbrbons
ASSBBSBD.
90
41
dlS
21
172
dl2
37
»'
62
128
18
dl5
119
<I25
17
d2
371
369
69
dl7
382
(16
175
83
Cf43
<I23
216
8
1,680
550
881
487
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
179
1,072
984
73
2,466
51
744
d 141
4,926
898
2.983
419
1,404
<f 372
16,070
1893. Increase or Decrease
1.368 , 10,675 12,870
23.045
1894. Increase or Decrease
30 Cities, .
1
NnilBBB OT 1
1
1 Nitmbbb of
NOH-
- NUMBBB OT
PBBBONB A88BB8BD.
RB8IDBNT8 AB8EB8ED
RK8IDBNT8 A88B88EI>
1
CITIES.
OB
Pbopbbtt.
1 OK
PBOPBBTT.
On
Prop-
erty.
Indi-
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
Indi-
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
Boston, .... 1,233
(1297
1,190
(2 267
(2 36
(2 308
887
(2 17
870
Brockton, .
278
72
350
(214
(21
(2 15
835
65
400
Cambridge,
(1520
610
90
(2 87
106
60
169
(2 360
(2 201
Chelsea, <
(187
(128
(1115
1 166
(2 16
150
35
127
162
Chieopee, .
59
5
64
80
6
86
160
34 184
Everett, .
101
25
126
78
4
82
j 208
231
439
Fall River,
369
34
408
(13
(23
(26
1 397
64
461
Fltohburg,
120
8
187
38
1
80
176
(2 620
(2 453
Qloucestar,
45
7
62
18
(21
17
69
842
411
Haverhill,
789
280
1,060
7
«-
7
1,076
(2 40
1,036
Holyoke, .
i 66
124
180
8
•-0
8
183
80
222
Lawrence,
' (1240
821
81
(2 21
38
17
98
(2 224
(2 126
Lowell, .
■ 184
5
189
(2 14
88
24
163
173
386
Lynn,
Maiden, .
160
260
410
(16
26
19
429
(21,6ri
(21,243
170
13
183
62
(2 22
40
228
870
603
liarlborough, .
194
(196
98
3
(22
1
99
13
112
liedford, .
(153
116
63
(137
68
31
94
243
337
New Bedford, .
(i33
338
306
1
10
11
816
128
444
Newburyport, .
(192
224
132
(110
(24
(2 14
118
12
180
Newton, .
112
7
119
41
12
68
172
44
21&
Northampton, .
148
d2
146
(22
(24
(26
140
(2123
17
Plttefleld, .
567
72
639
8
5
13
652
(2164
408
Quinoy, .
391
(1852
39
170
(2 83
87
126
706
832
Salem,
< (1125
«-
d\7b
1
7
8
(2117
162
45
Bomervllle,
1,223
203
1,426;
21
64
75
1.501
574
S,075
Springfield,
Taunton, .
621
(i76
546
44
(113
31
676
(2144
482
38
41
79
23
(26
17
96
(2 242
(2146
Waltham,
253
(2 24
229
28
(22
21
250
(2 481
<f 231
Wobum, .
(154
47
dl
(2 62
31
(2 81
(2 88
29
(20
Worcester,
476
10
486 '
44
3
47
673
688
(2 941
(2 408
30 Cities,
>
■ •
j 8,342
1,987
8,683
868
215
9,106
(21,671
7,436
1893. Increase or Decrease
5,639
687 I 6,176
870
85
I
455
6,631 I 9,766 16,396
(2 Decrease : « Same figures as lo 1892 : o No figures returned : All others Increase.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 19.
as compared with 1893.
Kamber
of Male
Polls
AsMMed.
»-
266
277
9
(11.068
209
461
d99
2,163
<2 14
939
223
497
d 1,311
VALUS of A88K88BD FSBSOKAL
ESTATB.
Excluding
Resident
Bank Stock
Resident
Bank
Btock.
Total.
I d
$647,946
</ 28,348
1,861,236
d 12,446
d 2,943,629
cf 46,226
226,400
d 206,797
d 2,056,862
d 29,736
826,139
d 663,076
10,862,966
d 918,912
2,631 I cT $14,287,276
d $39,888
d 39.490
d 168,739
d 67,426
(f 81,224
d 7,668
84,282
d 22,223
(2 60,343
dlU
d 191,610
(18,281
d 1,010,280
d 118,001
$608,067
(2 67.838
1,692,497
d 79,872
d 8,024.863
(2 63,794
310.682
(1228,020
d 2,107,206
d 80,479
633,629
d 661,367
d 11,863,246
d 1,036,913
d $1,721,436 i d $16,008,711
Value ot A88K88BI> Rial Bbtats.
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
$216,662
550.936
3,022,868
16,239
3,915,366
395,756
1,863,336
69,472
8,900,934
32,861
2,464,416
637,218
11,663,245
2,437,361
$86,176
428,916
6,047,051
95,487
748.247
87,439
687.686
64,221
5,417,232
31,469
2,348,309
805.032
4,979,470
1.408,795
$36,166,668 $23,034,619
Total.
$261,838
979,861
9,069,919
111,726
4,663,612
483,196
2,441,022
123,698
14,318,166
64,820
4,802,724
1.442,260
16,642,716
3,846,166
$59,191,187
08 compared with 1892.
23,669 ;! $9,319,379
d $18,666
$9,306,824
$42,847,937
$43,160,178
$86,008,116
Of compared with 1893.
WnmHiir
VaLUK of A88BSSXD PBIt80NAL
of Male
Polls
B8TATB.
Vat.ub of
ABSB88BD RbAL EBTATB.
Sxeladlng
Resident
Buildings,
Land,
Aiseised. ,
Resident
Bank
Total.
excluding
excluding
Total.
Bank Stock.
Btock.
Land.
Buildings.
86 ,
' d $10,974,800
d $1,114,444
d $11,966,284
$11,128,900
$4,852,675
$16,981,676
136 '
d 70,611
2,786
d 67,826
440,646
164,925
595,671
(1317
d 784,700
(2 67,169
d 841,869
1,483,200
612.600
2,095,800
in
40,675
d 18,796
21,879
220,160
18.400
238,660
76 ,
194,990
•-
194,990
196,540
49,610
246,060
290
61,600
«-o
61,600
663,000
605,400
1,168,400
269
1,466,560
d 61,192
1,396,368
909.000
800,200
1,709,200
d632
(2198,037
d 19,668
d 217,596
469.776
(2 64,224
406,662
325
d 138.780
2,628
c2 136,262
132,600
107,650
240,260
d36
d 247,829
6.017
d 242,812
264,936
12,787
267,722
95 '
272,810
8,000
280,810
341,277
483,023
824,800
d]66 ,
d 180,826
20.271
(2160,564
809,676
80,200
389,776
807
d 846,165
d 107,929
d 964,084
882,500
806,130
1,188,630
(11,623
d 1.687,763
7,685
d 1,680,068
907,200
163.530
1,070,780
334 ,
(2 42.000
8,430
d 38,570
621,500
202.350
823,860
64 1
d 161,281
172,506
11,225
264,086
329,645
593.680
260
(2 428,700
«-0
(2 428,700
417,400
896,076
813,476
92
692.600
d 123,970
468,630
1,655,246
4,836,954
6,491,200
24 1
(2 4,600
(2 6,461
d 10,961
96,800
22,200
118,000
61
d 218,876
12,110
c2 206,765
988,346
1,364,806
2,863,160
dlU
(2 4,244
(2 25,326
(2 29,670
(2 6,009
117,728
111,719
(f60 .
148,331
d 84,310
64,021
196,646
441,580
638.126
887
d 303,116
•-
d 803,116
269,090
213,410
482,600
39
822,212
d 89,668
732,644
482,000
203.100
686,100
638
209.100
(2 1,100
208,000
766,260
1,293.950
2,060.200
184
80,860
70,666
101,426
966,830
141.260
1,108,080
(f237
(2 66,906
18,090
d 47,816
201.706
148,665
850,370
(2 329
(2 225,600
(2 616
r2 226,116
239,700
130,600
870,300
02
<2 149,887
d 73,376
(2 223,263
119,460
70,615
190.076
(2 860
60,460
(2 84,429
(2 23,979
1,067,000
1,289,850
2,346,860
(2 418
1
,(2 $12,768,520
1
d $1,646,146
(2 $14,176,706
$26,663,196
$19,294,688
$46,947,779
as compared with 1892.
18,867 !| $9,740,002
$6,831
$9,746,833
$31,331,461
$36,436,760
$67,768,221
d DeereMe : $ Same flgnres as In 1892: o No flgnres returned : All others inorease.
10
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
1894. Increase or Dbcreaab
Btjltb,
Total
Tax tob Btatb, Countt, ahd Citt ob Towk
Valuatioh
PUBFOSBB, IHCLUDINO OTBBLATIKOB.
OOUNTIEB.
OF
asskbskd
Estate.
On Personal
EsUte.
On Real
EsUte.
On Polls.
Total.
Barnstable,
$7&9,895
$2,426
<l$713
«-
$1,718
Berkshire,
912,013
d 17,628
(f 24,506
$510
(2 41,024
Bristol, .
10,7(6.416
d 18,079
90,879
554
78,364
Dakes,
81,864
d 1,872
d 1,956
13
d 8,816
Essex,
1,688,759
d 99,372
96,410
d 2,116
64,922
Franklin, .
879,401
d 8,138
(16,850
418
d 9,070
Hampden,
2,751,704
d 17,820
d 37,059
902
(f 58,977
Hampshire,
liiddlesez.
d 104,827
d 1,802
9,400
<il98
7,400
12,210,961
d 37,323
231,502
4,806
198,486
Nantucket,
88,841
(f484
643
d28
131
Norfolk, .
5,486,858
d 18,396
164,055
1,878
147,687
Plymouth,
780,893
<f 5,192
21,215
446
16,400
Suffolk, .
4,779,470
d 149,480
232,348
688
83,501
Worcester,
2,809,248
d 14,598
60,093
(12,622
41,878
Bute,.
■ 1
1 •
$43,182,476
d $822,708
$834,970
$4,646
$616,918
1893. Increase or Decrease
$95,818,989
$810,205
$1,578,961
$47,157 $1,081,828
80 Cities, .
1894.
Increase or Decrease
Total
Tax fob Btatb, Countt, akd Citt ob Towh
Ratb of
Valuatiok
Pubpobib, including Ovbblatinqb.
Total
dTIBB.
or
asbbssed
Ebtati.
Tax
On
Personal
Estate.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
Total.
PBB
$1,000.
Boston
$4,015,291
d $153,169
$204,664
$172
$51,567
«-
Brockton,
527,745
(11,848
11,757
272
10,681
«-
Cambridge,
1,258,931
(2 23,802
(2 2,155
(2 634
(2 26,591
(2 $0.60
Chelsea, .
260.429
2,400
19,395
177
21,972 I
.80
Chioopee,
440,040
(2 4,740
d 15.449
150
(2 20,039 ,
(2 3.50
Everett, .
1,200,900
794
17,839
518
10,161 1
»-
Fall River,
3,104,558
9,418
6,419
518
16,865 i
(2.60
Fitchburg,
187.957
d 3,497
8,784
(21,0M
4,178
.10
Gloucester,
103,998
(2 1,018
7,421
650
7,053
.80
Haverhill,
24,910
(2 5.801
121
(2 70
(2 5,750
(2 .80
Holyoke, .
1,105,110
(2 1,081
(2 2,861
190
(2 3.752
(2.80
Lawrence,
229,221
(2 9,449
d 13,450
(2 832
(2 23.281 1
(2.80
Lowell, .
284,546
1,399
71.531
614
73.544
1.00
lomn.
Maiden, .
(2 509,338
d 14,581
55.700
(2 3,246
37,963 1
1.00
785,280
1,145
26,122
668
27,935
.70
liarlborough, ,
604,905
(2 999
6,902
108
6.011
(2.60
liedford. .
New Bedford, .
384,776
(2 9,070
(2 140
500
(f 8,710
(21.00
6,959,830
(2 29,038
63,109
184
24,255
(2 1.90
Newburyport,
107,049 ;
(2 3,697
(2 7,144
48
(2 10,793
(21.30
Newton, .
2,146,385 1
(2 5,032
27,998
102
23,068 1
(2.20
Northampton, ,
82.149 '
d 1,681
(2 2,091
(2 228
(2 4,000 .
(2.50
Pituaeld, .
702,146
1,225
5,871
(2 138
6,958
(2.60
Quiney, .
179,385 :
123
82,983
774
33,880
1.80
Balem,
1,417,744 1
6,749
3,560
78
10,396 1
(2 .50
Bomerville,
2,268,200
3,922
40,054
1,276
45,252 1
.SO
Springfield,
Taunton. .
1,209,506
(2 8,594
d 21,083
868
(2 29,309 '
d .80
302,554
(2 2,889
740
(2 474
(2 2.628
(2 .40
Waltham,
144.184
(2 4,142
4,630
(2 658
(2170 ,
(2 .10
Wobnrn, .
(2 33.188 ,
(2 1,114
16,557
184
15,627
1.70
Worcester,
2,322,871
8,083
49,040
(21,720
50,403
.20
SOCiUes,
ft
■ •
$31,772,073
(2 $254,484
$606,773
(2 $1,013
$351,276
-
1893. Increase ot Decrbasb
$77,614,064
$188,607
$1,089,817 I $37,627 I $1,816,961 i
• I
<2 Decrease : t Bame fignres as in 1802 : o No figures returned : All others inor«ase.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
11
as compared taith 1898 — Conoladed.
Number
Number
Number
Number
of
Number
Number
of
Number
of
numbkb and
Valtjb of Fowl
of
of
of
Neat Cattle
of
AssxsasD.
HortM
Cows
Sheep
other
Swine
Dwelling
Aores of
AMMsed.
AosesMd.
Aflsesaed.
than Cows
Auessed.
Houses
Land
Number.
Value.
•t
Aneseed.
Assessed.
Assessed.
107
(f 100
<I78
(127
50
87
72
(2 6,768
d $2,156
141
d«Bl2
<I564
(1681
889
463
812
d 8,156
d 3,486
09
dlM
dlB
(1878
885
687
1.661
8,408
2,490
64
dil
dl3
(178
4
27
(1184
(1675
d206
IM
d874
5
7
804
1,685
1,054
176
2,206
385
4 300
dl72
(2 840
829
93
(21,068
d 6,146
d822
W
d203
diss
(2 987
845
588
284
d 23,159
d 10,037
100
d92A
(108
(f437
399
72
880
d 1.521
. d 1.642
352
d420
(1185
d670
2,086
S.T14
(21,062
d 17.383
d 6,634
10
68
(180
(149
8-0
23
543
1,208
604
S25
(185
221
(122
1,460
979
d 4,955
d 0,027
d 3,256
50
(1401
106
(f 239
453
556
(2 679
d 13,311
d 5,912
M
28
«-o
<i3
d2l
1,815
^ (1275
»-o
»'0
207
<i522
(1470
(f 2,120
1.099
740
(2 2,808
d 20,187
d 5,950
2,255
€{4.329
(ll,«46
d6»469
7.732
10,474
(2 6,360
d 100,541
d $33,648
(M compared with 1892 — Concluded.
6,066
d 8,174
d089
d 7,309
d 2,906
11,168
4,672
81,089
$87,064
as compared imih 1893-
— Concluded.
1
Number
Number
Number
NUMBXB AKD
Namber
Number
Number
of
Number
of
of
Valub i
9F Fowl.
of
of
of
NeatCatUe
of
ASeSBBED.
Cows
Sheep
other
Swine
Dwelling
Acres of
Horses
Assessed.
1 Assessed.
Assessed.
than Cows
Assessed.
Assessed.
Houses
Assessed.
Land
Assessed.
Number.
Value.
100
60
«-o
8-0
8-0
1,700
d275
«-(»
8-0
(2 85
18
«-o
13
84
250
752
d898
d$441
dl70
d83
«-o
8-0
8
494
t-
f-O
8-0
d50
d56
s-o
8-0
8-0
d3
8-
8-0
8-0
30
d29
d6
7
25
63
8-
do-
do-
dS2
8
8-0
8'0
100
248
dlb
8-0
8-0
46
10
8-0
d2
8
152
d6
697
500
(239
d78
11
d6
42
107
«-
d 3,666
d 1,834
38
d60
8-0
9
8-0
181
d8
f-O
8-0
dl23
dlOO
6
43
d36
175
•-
d40
15
88
7
»-
d31
IS
217
d68
26
0
44
d 22
8-0
*^
dl6
227
21
8-0
8-0
d58
dll
»-
»-
6
197
47
dlOO
d60
164
t-
8-0
8-0
8-0
834
18
d956
d478
113
18
8-0
8-0
8-0
268
d217
8-0
8-0
d3
20
8-
d69
dl8
12
34
1,400
700
76
dl
8-0
1
do-
133
d516
8-0
8-0
d309
d67
8-0
dl7
dll
198
156
8-0
8-0
18
10
8-0
•-
8-0
38
8-
8-0
8-0
15
36
8-C
8-0
8-0
232
dl33
8-0
8-0
26
dl40
dl
109
dZ
83
4
d 1,676
d666
d266
dl57
dl63
d127
47
48
8-
d 1,185
d864
d4
d27
8-0
dl
8-0
149
d 2,320
8-0
8-0
61
885
8-0
3
22
146
25
8-0
8-0
286
36
8-0
t'O
8-0
460
»-
8-0
8-0
dl47
7
dl
dl9
56
428
•-
d 5,951
d 1,581
dW
d86
dl
dl2
8
107
8-
150
160
d59
(2 22
8-0
d4
42
100
117
dlOO
«-
33
d38
8-0
1
43
62
d3
d 1,944
d 1,298
16
63
de
d20
d20l
270
8-
1,295
650
dS04
d223 j
dl67
dl22
72
6,952
d 2,436
d 12,998
d $5,183
as compared with 1892 — Concluded.
2,560 d 1,169
(2 174
d42
d247
7,029
d 1,287
d 8,064
$60
d Decrease : « Same figures as In 1892 : o No figures returned : All others increase.
12
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AOOREOATES OF POLLS, PrOPERTT, TaXES,
COUNTIES, CITIES
AND TOWNS.
NUMBBR OF
RE8IDBMT8 AflSBSBBD
ON Pbopbbtt.
NUMBBR OF NON.
BBSIDBNTS A88E88KD <
ON Pbopebtt. !
NUMBBR of PBRflONS
A88B88BD.
Iiidl.
viduals.
1
All
Others.
Total.
Indl.
\idnals.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll'
Tax TotaL
only.
Barnstable.
I
BarnstRble,
1,136
82
1,167
409
16
424 <
1,691
234
1,826
Bourne, .
400
16
481
800
10
310
791
116
•07
Brewster, .
289
8
297
210
1
211
1 608
1
68 , 666
Chatham, .
690
21
617
152
3
166 '
772
164
026
Dennis, .
•
042
76
717
144
88
182 ,
1 809
186
1,084
Eastbam, .
178
28
196 >
109
22
181
327
18
346
Falmouth,
650
19
660
400
4
404
1,073
887
1,410
Harwich, .
893
-
893
291
-
291
1,184
144
1,328
Mashpee, .
97
22
119
110
48
158 1
277
25
302
Orleans, .
401
7
408
94
2
96
604
64
668
Provlncetown, .
896
161
1,047
81
6
86
1,133
736
1,868
Sandwich,
605
103
606
141
20
161 '
709
176
946
Truro,
220
66
286
166
30
194
479
41
620
Wellfleet, .
426
20
446
337
4
341
787
49
836
Yarmouth,
434
78
612
297
26
322 '
834
160
084
Totals,
7,823
639
8,462
3,230
236
3,466
11,928
2,476
14,404
Bebksuirb.
Adams, .
722
96
817 ;
70
18
88
905
1,161
2,066
Alford,
84
-
84
89
-
39
123
23
146
Becket, .
200
S
208
07
7
74
277
110
387
Cheshire, .
233
86
269 !
46
19
64
333
134
467
Clarksburg,
148
-
148 1
76
1
77
225
114
830
Dalton,
847
43
890 ;
47
18
65j
466
476
030
Egremont,
188
16
199
1
35
8
1
43 ;
242
86
827
Florida, .
84
1
86
48
2
60
135
46
180
Grent Barrlngton,
750
86
841
95
16
111
952
710
1,662
Hancock, .
107
8
no
88
28
66
170
20
196
Hinsdale, . . '
231
11
242
32
2
84
276
268
634
Lanesborongh,
179
-
179
66
-
66
! 236
70
314
Lee, .
680
16
095 1
87
2
89'
784
409
1,283
Lenox,
384
16
899
92
6
97 1
496
208
7M
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
13
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894.
Number
of Male
Polls
Aneeaed.
Tax
on each
Male Poll.
1,066
4eo
282
U5
T74
161
812
723
87
348
1,400
418
231
S8d
524
8,106
1,757
00 <
»4
323
244 I
753
2«S I
I
115
i^n I
117 '
465
268
1.000
007
$2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
$2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
'2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
200
2 00
2 00
2 00
Valub 01
' A80BS8VD PbRBOKAL
Excluding
Resident
Bank dtock.
Estate.
Resident
Bunk
Stock.
Total.
$1,122,110
$67,646
$1,179,756
347,600
-
347,600
150,670
-
159,670
134.723
-
134,723
665,762
-
565,762
66.813
1
-
66,318
8,601,829
68,630
8,664,959
166,150
87,250
253,400
7,360
-
7,360
123,168
-
123,168
761,300
152,162
018,452
176,676
-
175,675
116,683
-
116,683
180,466
-
189,455 ,
1
1 1,005,891
163,625
1,109,516 1
$8,448,179
$524,802
$8,967,481
$1,177,220
$62,146
$1,239,874
44,908
-
44,908
160,840
- •
160,840
168,270
-
153,270
63,008
-
63,008
932,703
-
932,703
76,047
-
75,947
18,880
-
18,880
814,476
183,760
948,225 ,
48,460
-
43,450 '
196,110
-
106,110
02,679
-
02,670
404,760
03,825
498,585
612,669
1
26,000
638,669
Valxtb of Assessed Real Estate.
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
$1,678,780
$813,850
629,665
600,210
227,680
169,055
482,628
206,076
656,786
242,770
118,551
87,387
1,827,028
769,900
445,800
374,690
36,600
144,020
305,362
122,616
839,230
326,811
453,275
269,800
146,950
68,010
280,026
141,583
484,475
816,786
$8,006,838
$1,695,465
86,495
144,465
267.690
76,790
1,099,738
127,220
27,785
1,475,325
87,700
264,605
177,227
864,675
1,261,800
$4,783,364
$778,700
103,746
121,266
291,030
94,066
271,474
232,497
120,626
887,940
197,730
231,520
271,398
413,250
1,181,135
Total.
$2,492,130
1,319,876
396,735
688,099
799,656
200,088
2,086,028
820,300
180,620
427,078
1,166,060
722,675
214,860
421,008
801,261
$12,740,202
$2,474,166
140,241
265,710
648,620
170,866
1,871,212
850,717
148,861
2,368,266
286,430
496,125
448,625
1,277,926
2,392,436
14
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aqoreoates of Polls, Propkbtt, Taxes,
COUNTIES, CITIES
AND TOWNS.
Total
Valuation
or
Assessed
Estate
MayI,
1884.
Tax fob State, County, and City or Town
PUBPOSES, INCLUDING OYBBLAYINOS.
Uatb
or
Total
Tax
PER
$1,000.
On
Personal
Rwtnte.
1
On Real
• Estate.
1
On
Polls.
1
' ToUl.
Babnstablb.
1
1
Barnstable,
$8,671,885
$12,977
$27,413
$2,110
$42,500
$1100
Bourne, .
1,667,475
3,476
13,199
988
17,613
10 00
Brewster, .
566,405
2,076
5,157
524
7,757
18 00
Chatham, •
828,422
2,200
11,708
1,110
15,108
17 00
Dennis, .
1,365,817
6,223
8,795
1,548
16,566
1100
Eastham, .
267,251
709
2,331
812
3,422
11 60
Falmouth,
5,651,887
21,746
13,729
1,624
86,000
6 10
Harwich, .
1,073,790
3,548
11,485
1,446
16,479
14 00
Mashpee, .
187,970
96
2,348
174
2,618
13 00
Orleans, •
551,140
1,602
5,564
606
7,862
13 00
ProTincetown, .
2,079,502
17,721
22,621
2,800
48,142
19 40
Sandwich,
898,250
2,459
10,116
886
18,411
14 00
Truro,
881,543
1,867
3,438
462
5,767
16 00
Wellfleet, .
611,063
1,515
3,383
572
5,470
8 00
Yarmouth,
l,970,7n
9,356
6,410
1,048
16,814
8 00
Totals,
$21,707,683
$87,721
$146,697
$16,210
$250,628
-
Berkshire.
Adams, .
$3,718,539
$17,971
$35,875
$3,514
$57,360
$14 50
Alford, .
385,149
449
1,402
180
2,031
10 00
Beoket, .
416,050
2,255
3,986
588
6,829
15 00
Cheshire, .
701,890
2,299
8,229
646
11,174
16 00
Clarksburg,
223,804
1,060
3,417
488
4,065
80 00
Dalton, •
2,803,915
7,182
10,559
1,606
19,2^
7 70
Bgremont,
435,664
759
^509
490
4,848
10 00
Florida, .
167,241
378
3,967
230
8,575
30 00
Great Barrington, .
3,311,490
9,482
23,633
2,798
85,918
10 00
Hancock, .
828,880
1
273
2,455
234
2,962
800
Hinsdale, .
002,235
2,655
6,648
910
10,213
18 50
Lanesborough,
511,304
846
6,056
516
7.418
13 50
XjvGf • • • 1
1,776,510
9,722
25,094
2,000
86,816
10 50
Lenox,
8,031,094
8.761
84,060
1,214
44,044
14 30
t
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
15
Etc., AS Assessed M^lt 1, 1894
— Continued.
«
Number
of
Number
of
Cows
Assessed.
Number
of
Sheep
Assessed.
Number
of
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
Number
of
Swine
Assessed.
Number
of
Dwelliog
Houses
Assessed.
Number
of
Acres of
Land
Assessed.
NUXBVB AND
Value of Fowl
asbessbd.
Horses
Assessed.
Number.
Value.
677
420
20
127
•
1,266
29,812
298
185
16
16
6
611
28,880
1,060
$530
182
14S
-
41
-
278
9,371
-
-
182
181
-
2
-
581
4,604
672
17
SSS
219
-
10
-
711
7,118
-
-
143
155
-
37
8
160
4,936
7.306
2,667
MO
408
80
01
-
829
22,796
-
-
3S»
180
-
-
32
886
8,670
-
-
54
34
-
16
-
74
12,892
-
-
312
176
-
68
37
343
6,100
2,428
971
12S
61
-
-
1,012
926
-
-
220
217
71
38
16
481
20,055
600
300
104
219
-
5
2
262
7,600
6,200
2,170
118
101
-
5
-
428
6,758
1,243
495
240
160
20
-
-
625
11,223
-
-
3,750
2.847
167
440
99
8,496
175,540
19,509
$7,040
580
619
116
122
78
1,510
11,900
•■
•
138
245
229
69
82
84
7,166
-
-
190
411
806
317
96
235
27.170
2,395
$958
283
722
829
418
149
322
16,700
-
-
183
298
18
72
90
173
7,956
-
-
382
406
332
123
43
510
13,486
-
-
293
602
488
836
100
192
11,125
3,947
1,406
120
304
243
126
56
89
14,263
-
-
807
1,136
382
371
197
926
26,229
1,740
778
198
467
1,672
172
62
116
20,746
2,367
084
402
586
201
193
79
273
13,745
-
-
286
764
413
273
131
242
17,213
3,580
1.790
700
660
272
160
123
720
15,520
6,821
1,626
829
746
236
131
86
536
11,910
1,668
418
16
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates of Polls, Propertt, Taxes,
COUNTIES, CITIES
NuMBSR or
RXBIDBMTS AaSKSSXD
ON Propbrtt.
Number or Non-
Rbbidbnts Assbsskd
ON Propbrtt.
NUXBBB OP PbBSONS
Absbssbd.
AND TOWNS.
Indi-
viduals.
AU
Others.
Total.
Indl.
\iduals.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
BxBKSHiRV —Con.
Monterey,
118
4
122
66
6
62
184
37
221
Mount Washington,
90
3
38
30
14
44
77
14
91
New Ashford, .
36
-
36
13
-
13
49
16
65
New Marlborough, .
282
16
298
85
27
112
410
132
542
North Adams, .
1,675
165
1.830 '
76
3
78
1,908
3,088
5,846
Otis
128
16
144
49
9
68
202
87
239
Pern,
86
4
90
64
6
70
160
18
178
Plttsfield, .
2,600
S81
2,881 j
192
16
207 '
3,088
3,693
6,681
Richmond,
196
8
198
89
-
30
237
37
274
Sandisfield, .
210
1
311
100
-
100
311
66
367
Savoy,
154
-
164
60
8
68
212
26
288
Sheffield, .
380
86
425
83
17
100
626
109
694
Btockbrldge, .
376
67
433
87
13
100
533
287
770
Tyrlngham,
87
6
92
20
16
36
128
82
160
Washington, .
94
-
94
83
6
88
182
39
221
West Btockbrldge, .
292
26
318
68
1
15
83
401
129
630
Wllliamstown,
638
20
658
1
98
7
106
763
661
1,824
Windsor, .
135
3
138
86
5
91
229
29
S58
Totals,
11,863
953
12.816
1 2.105
292
2,397
15,213
13,101
28,814
Bbistol.
Acushnet,
222
40
262
i 91
20
111
373
64
437
Attleborough, .
■ *
1,101
80
1,181
356
21
376
1,667
1,406
2,962
Berkley, .
•
286
8
288
124
1
125
' 413
71
484
Dartmouth,
> •
766
3
769
892
13
405
1,164
1
187
1,351
Dighton, .
» •
429
18
447
155
6
160
607
179
786
Baston, .
k •
789
107
896
161
61
212
1,108
663
1,771
Falrhaven,
■ a
640
17
657
1 293
6
299
956
208
1.164
Fall River,
■ ■
6,113
1,348
6,461
287
177
464
' 6,925
18,807
25,783
Freetown,
•
369
8
872
1
1 234
3
237
, «»
114
723
Mansfield,
• .
660
106
766
132
37
169
934
858
1,202
New Bedford, .
•
6,081
097
6,078
363
42
405
6,483
9.291
i5,n4
North Attleborough
.
838
168
1,006
, 176
29
204
1 1,210
1,098
2,306
Norton, .
■ ■
834
68
402
168
44
212 !
614
134
748
Baynharo,
1 •
366
64
429
111
27
138
507
120
687
Rehoboth,
» •
480
2
482
1
314
-
314
1
706
8S
884
1
1
— -
— —
I
-
- - - .
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 19.
17
Etc., as Asskssed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
of Male
Tax
on each
Male Poll.
Value or
ABSK88BD PeBSONAL
Estate.
Value of Assessed Real Estate.
Polls
AMMsad.
Excluding
Resident
Bank Stock.
Resident
Bank
Stock.
Total.
Baildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
Total.
138
$3 00
$88,716
.
$38,716
$53,415
$132,774
$186,180
84
200
6,470
-
6,470
23,458
51,368
74.821
44
200
7,796
-
7,795
11,475
49.425
60.000
S60
200
167,706
-
167,706
119,546
259,467
879.012
6,<W2
2 00
1,281,411
$212,399
1,493,810
3,788,575
1,922,620
5,711.095
147
8 00
40,521
-
40,621
68.835
117,258
171,088
81
2 CO
17,115
800
17,916
19.395
78,685
98,080
5,251
2 00
2,537,185
630,480
8,167.615
4,939,275
4.759.496
0.608,770
175
S 00
49,084
-
49,984
110,315
180,095
200,410
SU
2 00
66^023
-
66,923
118,244
162,497
280,741
182
200
27,201
-
27,201
40.844
93,755
134.609
4M
2 00
118,884
-
118,884
828,170
400.245
787.416
514
2 00
649,851
81,201
781,052
1,257,825
951,618
2.209,443
107
200
80,610
-
80,610
00,650
112.110
172.760
123
200
27,015
-
27.016
41,080
181,675
172,706
sn
300
100.761
-
100,761
172,811
217.812
890.628
1,02B
200
862,975
82,400
885,875
1,271,450
909,305
2.180,755
152
2 00
85,092
-
85,002
44,680
113,479
158,159
22,110
-
$10,296,632
$1,272,950
$11,500,682
$30,061,312
$15,798,940
$35,850,252
247
$2 00
$106,080
.
$105,080
$287,440
$276,760
$514,200
i^
800
779,460
$76,760
856,200
2,803,728
1,218,828
8,612,551
2«i
300
67,967
-
67,987
144.821
176,000
820,881
79ft
200
400,875
-
400,875
896.140
1,116,460
2,012,600
479
200
88,515
-
83,515
874.440
801.799
676,289
1,884
2 00
2,877,144
858,966
2,786,109
1.298.914
521,036
1,819,960
578
2 00
207,410
-
267,410
914.780
611.770
1,526.500
22«421
2 00
23,618,800
1,160,863
24,769,063
21,910,760
16.958.760
88,860,500
866
2 00
156,777
-
156,777
844.720
312.040
656,760
872
2 00
237,460
-
237,460
1.084,737
516,068
1.550,805
U.080
2 00
17.019,500
2,579,925
19,699,425
17,122,809
14,712.601
81.835.500
1,728
200
608,866
150,466
758,331
1,988,665
1,088.975
8.072.680
405
200
136^241
-
126,241
823,403
828,972
662.875
400
200
119,624
-
119,624
825.643
832,601
658,284
450
200
96,065
-
96.065
281,450
402.640
684,000
18
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AOORBOATKS OF FOLLS, PBOPBBTT, TaXES,
COUNTIES, CITIES
Total
Valuation
OF
assebbbd
Estatr
MatI.
1894.
Tax for Stati, Codntt, and City or Town
FURPOBXB, INCLUDINO OTBRLATINOB.
Ratb
OF
Totai.
Tax
AND TOWNS.
On
Personal
Estate.
On Real
SsUte.
On
Polls.
Total.
FBB
$1,000.
Bbrkbhirb — Con.
Monterey,
$224,905
$681
$2,703
$276
$3,660
$16 00
Moant Washington,
81,201
61
710
68
880
060
New Aflhford, .
68,606
100
661
88
1,048
14 00
New Marlborough,
646,717
2,618
6,873
788
0,220
16 60
North Adams, .
7,204,006
26,306
07,068
10,124
182,607
17 00
Otis, ....
211,600
648
2,786
204
8,678
16 00
Pern,
116,006
287
1,648
162
2,007
16 80
Pittsfleld, .
12,866,386
41,366
168,000
10,602
200,048
16 80
Richmond,
340,304
766
4,442
860
6,668
16 80
Sandisfield,
347,664
1,071
4,402
486
6,000
16 00
Savoy,
161,800
680
3370
804
4,864
S6 00
Sheffield, .
866,200
1.786
10,766
072
13,474
14 00
Stockbridge, .
2,040,406
7,068
S4,068
1,028
38,070
10 00
Tyrlngham,
203,370
418
2,332
214
2,060
13 60
Washington, .
100,720
861
2,220
846
2,817
13 00
West Stockbridge,
401.884
1,783
6,710
742
0,104
17 20
WilllamstowD,
2,666,130
6,860
86,068
2,068
44,400
16 60
Windsor, .
103,261
640
2,486
804
8,280
16 40
ToUls,
$47,410,884
$166,764
$634,021
$44,220
$736,006
-
Bristol.
Acushneti
$610,280
$1,471
$7,100
$404
$0,164
$14 00
Attleboroagh, .
4,468,761
17,124
72,261
4,646
08,021
20 00
Berkley, .
888,308
644
2,688
680
8,662
600
Dartmouth,
2,412,076
4,804
24,161
1,600
80,646
12 00
DightOD, .
760,764
1,270
10,270
968
12,607
16 20
Baston, .
4,666,069
21,880
14,660
2,668
80,116
800
Fairhaven,
1,703,010
4,011
22,807
1,166
28,064
16 00
Fall Rlyer,
63,638,663
416,120
668,006
44,842
1,118,070
16 80
Freetown,
812,637
1,668
6,667
780
8,866
10 00
Mansfield,
1,788,274
4,274
27,014
1,744
88,032
18 00
New Bedford, .
61,434,026
806,761
406,634
26,100
828,646
16 60
North Attleborough
1 •
3,826.061
18,080
78,743
8,462
06,276
24 00
Norton, .
778,616
2,120
10,960
810
13,800
16 80
Raynham,
777,868
1,447
7,066
800
10,212
12 10
Rehoboth,
720,146
- 1,438
0,688
000
11,076
16 20
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
19
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
Number
Number
Number
of
Number
Number
of
Number
Of
numbvb and
Value of Fowl
of
of
Cowe
AMened.
of
Sheep
AaMMed.
Neat Cattle
other
than OowB
AMOHed.
of
Bwine
AaMaaed.
Dwelling
HOUMB
AraeaMd.
Acrea of
Land
AaaeaMd.
Assessed.
Honet
Number.
Value.
216
443
228
901
42
130
16,465
2,190
$547
66
60
45
21
8
43
12,670
-
-
52
87
817
96
27
37
7.611
-
-
602
1,826
809
382
146
324
27,865
4,788
1,197
963
599
77
66
50
2,417
9,696
-
-
167
297
295
244
48
155
21,982
880
343
101
275
211
95
16
83
16,000
-
-
1,9M
1,026
255
184
178
2.892
23.344
2,665
06
28B
482
728
123
64
198
11,476
4,635
1,360
811
604
814
380
72
256
29,626
65
37
U7
488
239
187
73
100
1P,987
'2.210
740
613
1,378
580
488
157
443
27,687
4,963
2.024
64S
606
618
194
103
490
13,649
3,896
1,839
166
833
356
184
70
107
10,876
1,105
455
140
470
249
206
72
111
28,660
1,544
386
199
854
218
49
83
342
11,251
3,038
1,215
785
1,180
1,882
172
161
798
28,214
6,878
2,308
240
687
840
261
66
185
21.378
-
-
12,587
18,668
12,686
6,822
2,801
16,062
547.264
58,694
$20,871
884
868
^
42
77
267
11,067
6,616
$2,225
735
617
1
95
101
1,481
16,000
-
-
270
886
15
54
26
248
9.790
-
-
866
1,455
26
97
188
988
35,795
18,295
7,318
840
298
-
66
49
427
13,016
761
196
564
487
8
67
187
929
16,138
-
-
843
S41
-
46
38
756
6,787
2,130
1,065
2,801
626
-
18
78
6,709
18,411
3,127
1,600
MB
266
29
13
56
330
21,390
4,216
1,054
434
254
-
36
68
827
11,296
8,466
1,886
i.294
660
-
20
121
7,096
9,492
-
-
996
644
28
44
10
1,249
10,399
-
-
836
351
7
104
44
388
16,860
4,667
1,648
860
381
10
69
36
882
11,402
5,608
2,889
576
1,168
83
152
125
420
27,892
14,510
5,078
20
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates
OP Polls, '.
Property, Taxes,
COUNTIES, CITIES
NuMBXB or
RBBIDXMTB AS8K88KD
ON Pbopkbtt.
NUMBXB OF N0N<
RB8IDBNT8 A88B88BD
ON Pbopbbtt.
NnVBBB OF PXB80N8
AaaxasxD.
AND TOWNS.
Indl.
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
Indl.
viduais.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
Bbibtol — Cod.
Soekonk, ....
336
-
886
219
6
224
669
67
626
Someraet, .
376
8
384
83
1
84
468
261
729
Bwanzey, .
406
4
410
170
6
176
686
133
718
Taanton, .
8.341
487
3,828 '
878
47
426
4,263
4,969
9,212
Weetport,
701
7
708
279
9
288
906
162
1,148
Totals,
22.622
3,628
26,160
4,484
645
5,027
31,177
38,869
09,686
DUKS8.
1
Ohllmark,
105
27
182 1
73
21
94
226
14
240
Cottage City, .
*
843
12
365
1,041
12
1,063
1,408
83
1,491
BdgartowD,
374
8
377
602
2
604
881
188
1,014
Gay Head,
40
-
40
1
38
-
83
73
37
110
Ootnold, .
33
-
83
18
-
13
46
11
67
Tiabary, .
248
63
311
118
28
141
452
133
685
West Tlabory,
148
41
189
50
21
71
260
36
296
Totals,
1,201
146
1,437
1,830
79
1,909
8,846
447
3.703
BSSBX.
Amesbary,
1,307
240
1,647
149
18
162
1,709
1,606
3,215
AndoTer, .
885
115
960
164
89
206
1,158
766
1,909
Beverly, .
1,562
369
1,931
1
829
22
861
2,282
2,163
4,436
Boxford, .
241
4
246
183
8
191
436
60
486
Bradford, .
700
67
757
168
26
183
940
708
1.648
Danvere, .
1,109
176
1,876
108
20
128
1,608
1,146
2,649
BMez,
458
-
468
162
-
152
610
172
782
Georgetown, .
418
lis
631 1
109
29
138
660
262
921
Gloucester,
2,878
192
8,070
429
11
440
3,610
5,068
9,478
Groveland,
607
_
807
130
2
132
639
265
904
Hamilton,
246
-
246
466
9
466
711
2n
988
Hayerhlll,
8,263
696
3,949
182
37
219
4,168
6,418
10,581
Ipswich, •
762
182
984
817
39
266
1,190
648
1,788
Lawrence,
4,196
770
4,966
330
62
392
5,368
]
9.867
15,226
Lynn,
7,000
1,671
8,671
347
74
421
1 8,992
14,011
23.003
Lynnfleld,
184
9
198
161
6
166
i 340
81
430
Manchester,
826
108
420
1
219
62
281
710
213
923
Marblehead, .
1,103
262
1,366
265
29
284
1,649
1.606
3,265
Merrimac,
424
80
604
80
18
98
602
401
1,008
Methnen, .
846
20
875
288
17
306
. 1.180
916
2,006
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
21
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Continued.
Nnmber
of ICale
Tax
oneaoh
MalePoU.
Valus Of
> asbesbbd psbsonal
Estate.
Value of Assebbbd Real Estate.
Poll!
AMoned.
Excluding
1 Resident
Bank Stock.
Beaident
Bank
Stock.
Total.
BnildlngB,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
Total.
321
$2 00
$244,435
.
$244,485
$316,260
$342,865
$659,125
518
2 00
188,615
-
188,615
482,290
398.228
880,518
42T
2 00
192,954
$800
193,254
258,750
363,125
621.875
7,160
200
4,030,980
1,042,555
5,073,494
8,914,360
6,000,110
13,914,470
688
2 00
213,875
-
213,875
619,920
630,705
1,250,625
M,T99
-
$50,876,510
$6,859,824
$66,286,384 |
$60,128,450
$45,610,418
$105,738,868
111
t2 00
$27,108
-
$27,103
$71,689
$116,887
$188,076
20S
2 00
n,926
-
77,926
1,053,400
406,475
1.459.875
900
2 00
112,174
$18,974
181,148
268,305
305,705
574,010
87
1 60
4,936
-
4,936
11,422
7,536
18,958
38
2 00
16,864
-
16,364
100,687
105,746
206,883
SCO
2 00
79,406
-
79,406
468,521
251,194
719,716
150
2 00
57.788
-
57,783
188,418
139,087
822,505
1,276
$375,691
$18,974
$394,665
$2,167,392
$1,832,130
$3,489,522
S,S06
^2 00
$778,578
$207,295
$985,868
$2,682,756
$1,807,260
$3,940,016
i;sii
200
942,807
118,712
1,061,519
2,118,494
1,288,737
3.407.231
3^
200
8,255,775
189,062
3,394,837
5,042,060
5,387.500
10.429.550
202
200
80,515
-
80.515
224,466
338.450
602,915
1450
200
324,418
-
824,418
1,330,041
821,682
2.151.573
2,0<1
200
877,700
65.260
942.960
2,091,040
1.882,810
3.478.850
474
800
144,521
-
144.521
415,172
318,441
738.618
616
200
192,325
16,100
208.425
508.580
275,615
784.195
7,880
2 00
3,368,950
728,528
4.097,478
6,356,400
5,167,300
11.528,700
640
2 00
187,406
-
187.406
545,294
212,599
757,893
S78
2 00
296,544
-
206,544
406,705
404,853
811,558
8.654
2 00
3,876,092
810,270
4,686,362
8,259,060
7,490,893
15,749,943
1,135
2 00
781,154
15,900
747,054
1,290,980
759,746
2,050.676
12,780
200
7,760,476
669,243
8,438,718
14,294.575
10,703,800
24.997.875
18^401
2 00
i 9.692,449
1,323,126
11,015,574 '
20,455,525
17,988,872
38.444,397
228
2 00
] n,462
-
77,452
275,975
255,327
531,302
477
2 00
8,844,572
-
3,844,572 |
1,548,185
1,302,972
2,851,107
2,886
2 00
716,700
152,780
868,480 ,
2,613.000
1.986,650
4,599,650
649
200
254,172
69,790
328,962
683.755
303,507
987,262
1,450
200
1
856,671
51,260
907,931
1.568.725
995,570
2,564,295
22
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates of Polls, Propestt, Taxxs,
COUNTIES. CITIES
Total
Valuation
OP
Assessed
Estate
MatI,
1994.
Tax fob State, County, and Citt ob Town
PuBPosEs, nrcLUDiNa Oveblatinos.
Rate
OF
Total
Tax
AND TOWNB.
On
Personal
Estate.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
Total.
FEB
$1,000.
Bbistol — Con.
Beekonk, .
$g03,560
$2,444
$6,691
$642
$9,677
$10 00
Somerset,
1,019,183
2.010
12,767
1,036
16,818
14 50
Bwanzey, .
816,120
2,783
8,955
864
12,602
14 40
TanotOD, .
18,087.064
89.294
244,894
14,820
848,608
17 60
Westport,
1,464,500
8.422
20,010
1,366
24,798
16 00
Totals,
$161,976,202
$901,854
$1,733,670
$109,698
$2,745,022
-
Ddkbs.
1
Chllmark,
$215,179
$260
$1.T41
$222
$2,213
$0 26
Cottage City, .
1.637,800
1,216
22,774
624
24,614
16 00
Bdgartown,
706.158
1,574
6,888
720
0,182
12 00
Gay Head,
28.804
49
261
56
866
10 00
GosDold, .
222,747 1
76
048
76
1,000
4 00
Tilbury, .
709,121
968
8,636
618
10,207
12 00
West Tisbary,
380,288
347
1,985
318
2,600
600
Totals,
$8,884,187
1
$4,464
$43,183
$2,533
$50,180
-
Essex.
Amesbnry,
$4,925,884
$16,182
$60,676
$5,016
$80,874
$15 40
AodoTer, .
4.468.750
17,515
66,219
2,622
76.356
16 60
Beverly, .
18,824,887
63,638
164,787
6,726
226.161
16 80
Bozford, .
643,480
902
6,266
404
7,671
11 20
Bradford, .
2,476.901
5.969
39,589
2,618
48,076
18 40
Dan vers, .
4,416.810 ,
15.841
58,860
4.082
78,288
16 80
Essex,
878.134 1
2,486 ,
12.618
948
16,052
17 10
Georgetown, .
992.620
3,388
12,745
1.232
17,366
16 25
Gloaeester,
16,621,178
68,838
193,698
16,660
278,096
16 80
Groveland,
945.209
3,186
12,884
1,280
17,350
17 00
Hamilton,
1.108.102
1,915
5.904
656
8,875
7 00
Haverhill,
20.436.305
88,417
280.349
17,808
381,074
17 80
Ipswich, .
2.797.730 '
10,627
28.370
2,270
41.267
13 80
Lawrence,
33,436.593
135.019
309,966
26,660
660.645
16 00
Lynn,
49.459.971
189.468
661.243
36.982
887,603
17 20
Lynnfield,
608,754
968
6.652
456
8,076
12 50
Manchester,
6.695.679 i
28.835
21.384
954
51.173
750
Marblehead, .
5.468,130
16,546
82,384
4,772
102,662
17 90
Merrlmac,
1.311,224
6,669
17,182
1.298
24,000
17 50
Methaen, .
8,472,226
1
14,513
48,608
2,918
61.024
17 00
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
23
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
N amber
Number
Number
Number
of
Number
Number
of
Dwelling
Houses
Assessed.
Number
of
numbkr and
Value of Fowl
of
Horses
of
Cows
Assessed.
of
Sheep
Assessed.
NeetOaUle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
of
Bwlne
Assessed.
1
Acres of ^
Land ,
Assessed. '
A88B88ED.
Number. Value.
460
828
66
112
387
307
11,025
3.870
•1,354
29T
828
-
66
27
420
4,726
3,810
1,005
506
708
-
80
64
340
13,220
10,945
3,283
1,S4S
702
3
56
8
4,335
26,222
1,000
900
737
1,005
95
187
93
718
28,676 1
30.913
12.400
14,977
11,002
816
1,408
1,663
28,611
317,683
112.933
$44,200
104
70
8,365
70
12
122
10,096
1
-
-
140
126
-
-
-
1,072
3,423
1
-
108
274
970
83
-
861
11.660
-
-
12
22
-
51
-
54
1,463
211
$73
31
47
2,660
10
-
45
8,484
-
-
183
61
11
4
-
887
8,986
1
-
158
167
1,613
101
-
181
11,480
-
-
681
776
8,619
819
12
2.172
50,471
211
$73
558
328
4
72
78
1,603
7,389
-
-
735
894
8
126
148
1.047
18.469
-
-
1,061
660
-
2
-
2,126
8.656
1
-
226
422
42
104
67
192
13,800
4,088
$2,044
418
296
9
10
90
867
4.623
-
-
752
722
80
-
-
1,342
7,400
2,600
1,800
287
4D4
-
30
60
414
7,841
3.235
970
810
253
45
66
27
486
7,648
1,170
585
1.158
621
-
9
-
3,624
9.878
-
-
241
206
8
42
73
426
5.230
6.713
2,856
810
888
5
99
44
540
0,652
2.626
1,462
2,000
807
81
74
241
5,288
15.620
510
240
600
880
65
208
256
801
16,616
7,021
3.610
1,786
215
-
5
20
6,831
3,270
1
-
2,814
842
^
-
-
10,102
4.426
1 1.484
742
200
907
-
19
115
188
6,138
6.026
3,012
806
140
-
11
12
449
4.385
-
888
274
-
7
-
1,671
2.403
-
-
257
230
5
49
68
698
4.056
1
1
-
715
1,177
168
293
951
13,449
8.300
1,155
24
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggreqates
OF Polls,
Propestt, Taxes,
Number or j
Residents Assessed
1 Number of Non-
Residents Assessed
1
Number op Persons
Assessed.
COUNTIKS, CmEB
ON
Propertt.
ON
Property.
AND TOWNS.
Indi.
viduals.
AU
Others.
Total.
Indi-
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
ToUl.
Essex ^ Con.
i
1
MlddletoD,
196
22
218
124
35
159
1,377
75
1,452
Nahant, .
170
4
174
148
9
157
831
128
454
Newbury,
302
9
811
188
7
195
606
152
658
Newbaryport, .
1,722
347
2,069
169
20
189
2,258
2,618
4,871
North Andover
t
446
77
623
150
39
189
712
698
1,405
Peabody, .
1,872
66
1,437
236
24
260
1,697
2,111
3,808
Rookport,
941
16
966
186
9
104
1,150
632
1,782
Rowley, .
888
18
886
206
11
217
653
127
680
Salem,
8,202
846
3,647
811
14
325
3,872
7,618
11,485
Salisbury,
302
27
329
355
68
423
752
158
905
Saagus, .
770
76
846
387
60
447
1,293
692
1,986
SwampBOOtt,
562
16
578
206
14
820
798
301
1,189
Topsfleld,
217
37
254
79
8
87
841
03
484
Wenham, .
239
4
243
149
2
151
894
88
482
West Newbury,
360
62
412
45
11
56
468
248
716
Totals,
39,649
6,067
46,636
7,874
852
8,226
54,862
63,113
117,976
Franklin.
Ashfleld
270
14
284
51
4
65
330
67
396
BernardstoD, .
218
4
222
72
1
73
205
46
841
Buokland,
880
1
331
75
5
80
411
219
630
Oharlemont, .
266
6
202
88
-
88
300
108
402
Colrain, .
313
6
318
67
-
67
876
130
504
CoDway, .
293
6
299
82
2
84
888
106
401
Deerfleld, .
655
6
661
117
16
133
794
800
1,184
ErvlDg, .
207
7
214
66
7
73
287
119
406
Gill, .
177
4
181
24
2
26
207
76
283
GreenAeld,
909
111
1,020
82
18
100
1,120
1,054
2,174
Hawley, .
134
-
134
64
2
66
190
37
227
Heath,
183
-
133
52
-
62
185
•
83
30S
Leverett, .
198
4
202
80
4
84
286
65
841
Leyden, .
80
5
85
43
2
45
180
29
150
Monroe, .
50
-
50
18
-
13
68
02
186
Montague,
733
53
786
828
6
sao
1,116
1,138
2,253
New Salem,
•
194
15
209
86
12
97
806
82
888
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
25
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Continued.
Namber
of Male
Polls
AsoeMed.
Tax
on each
Male Poll
231
230
402
3,830
1,037
3,068
1,245
396
9,351
376
1,250
785
270
270
536
00,057
290
224
4n
318
S92
369
843
288
235
1,825
160
146
222
97
106
1J09
211
Value or AsdESsvD Personal
i Estate.
' Exclndiog
I ReBident
' Bank Stock
ResldeDt
Bank
Stock.
Total.
$2 00
3 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
S 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00 i!
l|.
^ 00
S 00
2 00
8 00
2 00
2 00
2 OO
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00 I,
2 00 I,
2 00 |(
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
$59,624
2,434,139
148,290
2,200.400
669,013
2,083,950
288,060
92,215
10,925,412
54,265
261,825
1,529,675
$499,877
260,000
63,396
928,088
$59,624
2.434,139
148,290
2.700,277
569,013
2,343,950
351,476
92,215
11,853,600
54,265
261,825
1,520,675
W«,W)0
~
inn.'joo
117,626
-
117,625
104,127
-
104,127
$59,528,196
$6,118,686
$65,646,882
$91,277
•
$91,277
69,770
-
69.770
80,021
-
80,021
73,520
-
78,520
157,084
-
157,084
154,619
$33,966
188,585
161,827
-
161,827
91,771
-
91.771
72,285
-
72,285
1,030,767
220,822
1.269,080
33,271
-
33.271
68,378
-
63.378
61.784
-
61,734
27,010
-
27.010
48,817
-
48,317
693,892
56,910
749,802
46,800
-
46,300
Value of Assessed Real Estate.
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
Total.
$259,922
1,350,144
360,850
4,786,860
1,454,729
3,055,270
1,245,582
301,513
10,601,900
822,196
1,711,990
1,968,700
286,390
828.950
475.200
$101,170,852
$206,640
148,945
242,930
138,045
190,645
242,645
662,425
194,784
167,405
2,280,060
89,441
28,625
81,030
41,297
69,411
1,775.565
107,715
$216,828
1,008,070
455,870
3,252,050
816,429
2,142.880
1,001,214
242,480
6,861,300
280,376
973,950
1,650,835
209,390
227,275
304,255
$76,285,075
$191,274
155,279
204,200
140.068
204.570
263,081
755.744
95,846
228,016
1,537,004
76,866
96.660
140,400
93,913
35,080
1,021,895
139,456
$476,750
2.358.814
816.720
7.038,900
2,271.158
5,198,160
2,246.796
643,948
16,468,200
•
652.570
2,686,940
3.619.625
495,780
656,225
779,465
$177,466,927
$897,914
299.224
447.130
274,018
396.216
506.726
1,418.160
290.180
800.421
3.817.073
114.807
124.286
221,430
135,210
94,441
2,797,460
247,170
26
POLLS, iPROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AOOREOATES OF POLLS, FrOPEKTT, TaXES,
COUNTIES,
CITIEB
. Total
Valuation
OP
assbssed
Estate
MatI,
ISM.
Tax for State, County, and Citt or Towh
Purposes, nrcLumNo Oyerlatings.
Rate
OF
Total
Tax
PER
$1,000.
AND TO\vnB,
On
Personal
EsUte.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
TotaL
Essex — Con.
Mlddleton,
$536,374
$S82
$7,061
$462
$8,406
$14 80
Nfthant, .
4,792,353
15,822
15,328
460
31.610
6 50
Newbury,
965,010
1,483
8,167
804
10,464
10 00
Newbnryport,
• • •
9,739,177
42,394
110,511
7,660
160,565
15 70
North Andover
9
2,840,171
J 7,966
31,796
2,074
41,836
14 00
Peabody, .
7,642,100
i 41,258
91,487
6,136
138,876
17 60
Rockport,
2,598,272
5,623
35,949
2,490
44.062
16 00
Rowley, .
636,158
922
5,439
792
7,153
10 00
^lem, '
28,316,700
199,139
276,582
18,702
494,423
16 80
Salisbury,
606,885
651
6,631
762
8.034
12 00
BaugUB, .
2,947.766
4,818
49,421
2,500
56.739
18 40
Bwampscott,
5,149,200
16,826
39,815
1,570
58,211
11 00
Topsfield,
888,065
4,315
5,454
540
10,809
1100
Wenham, .
678,850
1,364
6,452
540
8,366
11 00
West Newbury,
883,582
1,197
8,964
1.070
11.231
11 50
Totals,
$248,102,809
$1,017,577
$2,863,725
$180,114
$4,061,416
-
Franklin.
Ashfleld, .
• •
$489,191
$1,552
$6,764
$580
$8,896
$17 00
Bernardston,
868,994
837
3,591
448
4,876
12 00
Buckland,
527,151
1,404
7,808
054
10.166
17 50
Charlemont, .
347,583
1,470
5,480
686
7,586
20 00
Colrain,
552,299
2,357
5,928
784
9,069
15 00
Conway, .
604,311
3,300
8,851
788
12.889
17 50
Deerfield, .
1,579,996
1,715
15.033
1,686
18.434
10 60
Ervlng, .
381,901
2,111
1
6,673
576
9.360
23 00
GUI, . .
462,666
722
3,904
450
6,076
10 00
Greenfield,
5,086,162
17,767
58,439
8.650
74,856
14 00
Hawloy, .
148,078
799
2,755
338
8,892
24 00
Heath,
187,663
1.142
2,288
292
8,672
18 00
Leverett, .
283,164
864
8,100
444
4.406
14 00
Leyden, .
162,220
450
2.241
194
2.885
16 60
Monroe, .
142,758
652
1,277
212
2,141
13 50
Montague,
3,547,262
10,422
88,885
3.418
52,725
13 90
New Salem,
•*
293,470
671
8,585
422
4,678
1
14 50
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
27
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
of
HonM
156
124
402
843
296
2B1
1,472
180
3S5
316
234
21,613
Number
of
Cows
Number
of
Sheep
AsaesMd.
Number
of
Neat Cattle
other
than Cowe
Aseeued.
269
99
897
255
1,Q06
658
167
353
699
306
544
102
609
887
667
16,887
887
974
282
524
248
522
885
408
521
791
414
988
698
1.041
168
134
206
444
885
748
146
886
204
303
340
876
142
254
84
125
M6
558
208
282
45
45
37
17
8
6
12
37
455
1,382
800
710
1,475
1,873
1,055
189
45
193
311
717
656
64
422
159
93
119
8
252
6
121
54
6
107
9
123
10
8
80
31
180
2,058
459
223
239
218
548
208
385
•41
212
256
200
270
124
184
51
155
99
Number
of
Swine
AeaeMed.
27
139
129
1,578
52
67
51
5
67
104
48
40
3,874
168
122
188
95
204
136
101
29
78
202
62
63
90
45
15
178
46
Number
of
Dwelling
Houeet
A Messed.
Number
of
Acres of
Land
Assessed.
215
845
302
2,621
728
1,709
833
814
4,648
525
970
797
233
231
882
54,668
247
202
344
232
314
280
630
210
163
1,134
117
120
180
93
43
1,000
215
8,398
463
13,614
4,576
15,561
9,050
8,182
10,477
3,827
8,436
5,750
1,444
7,275
4,530
8,121
275,151
24,118
13,067
11,721
15,496
25,253
22,976
20,060
8,446
8,208
10,600
17,308
14,995
12,937
9,500
6,907
16,500
17,008
Number and
Valus op Fowl
Assessed.
Number.
Value.
4,062
1
$2,016
5,084
1,706
6,690
3,385
4,814
2,501
2,044
1
1,026
2,975
885
7,180
3,500
2,264
1,132
3,630
1,815
4,150
2,075
4,580
2,290
85,014
$40,247
455
$14
1,131
563
4,640
1,547
3,908
•
1,568
1
' 3,335
1,334
1 ~
-
538
4,511
102
1,608
28
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AoaREOATBs OP PoLLS, Pbopbrty, Taxes,
OOUXTIES, CITIES
Number of
Residents Assessed
ON Property.
Number of Non-
residents Assessed
ON Property.
Number of Persons
Assessed.
AND TOWNS.
Indi.
viduals.
1
All
Others.
Total.
Indl-
vidoala.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
ToCaL
Franklin — Con.
•
Northtield,
482
80
471
121
12
133
004 1
150
764
Oraogep .
1,000
72
1,072
163
26
188
1.260
847 I
2,107
Kowe,
09
8
102
53
8
56
158
160
318
Shelbnrne,
340
20
300
47
4
61
420
168
688
Shutesburyp
134
134
125
1
126
260
26
286
Sunderlaod,
177
1
178
60
60
238
74
312
Wftrwiok.
100
32
192
101
43
144
336
■ 88
374
Wondellp .
118
6
123
162
7
159
282
80
321
WlMtely, .
101
3 104
70 - 4
74
268
73
6,251
341
TotaU,
7,801
425
8,226
2,206
180
2.386
10,612
15,863
Hampden.
Agawam,
463
39
502
121
19
140
642
220
862
Blandford,
203
6
208
67
6
78
281
40
330
Brimfleld,
227
7
234
74
6
80
314
88
402
Chester, .
287
5
292
68
3
71
863
280
1 503
1
Chioopee, .
1,429
45
1,474
255
21
276
1,760
2,807
4,647
Granville,
311
-
311
61
1 _
61
372
60
431
Hampden,
183
1
184
80
-
89
273
75
348
Holland, .
45
2
47
48 j 12
60
107
13
120
Holyoke, .
1,776
1,063
2,838
177
t
177
3,015
8,207
, 11.222
Longmeadow, .
375
10
385
78
6
84
469
310
788
Lndlow, .
288
6
294
70
2
72
366
351
717
Monson, .
517
53
570
94
19
113
683
427
1,110
Montgomery, .
75
-
76
47
1 '
48
123
13
130
Palmer, .
' 723
87
760
127
• 3
130
890
1,147
2,037
RuSMfll, .
00
1
100
36
7
43
143
136
270
Boathwick,
•
256
4
260
78 ; 10
88
848
71
410
Springfield,
7,389
455
7,844
463
1
14
477
8,321
10.416
1 18,737
Tolland, .
80
-
80
1
46 i
46
126
19
i 1«
Wales,
154
6
160
60 5
65
225
109
3;^
Westfield,
1,609
285
1,894
164 , 33
1
197
2.091
1,717
' 3,808
West Springfield, .
670
6
676
170
10
180
865
065
1,880
Wilbraham, .
250
12
262
68 1 6
64
326
175
601
Totals,
17,408
2,042 > 19,450
2.460 183
1
2,643
22,003
27,704
40,707
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
29
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
of Male
PolU
Tax
on each
Male Poll.
4»2
1,694
240
421
133
226
172
154
264
11,707
628
223
271
445
3,855
255
200
40
0,M2
504
5n
088
75
1,712
217
287
14,023
80
216
2,873
381
40,046 I
$2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
$2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
Valuk or AssEBssD Personal
Estate.
Excluding
Resident
Bank Stock.
$101,627
608,835
81,433
172,076
19,989
49,086
60,550
49,211
80.221
$4,037,820
$184,064
103,655
57,542
75,742
2,275,850
88,316
64,670
9,091 i
9,368,660
167,060
260,938
477,695
23,065
782,923
157,231
64,123
10,052,170
29,942
66,671
1,782,586
355,986
135,676
Resident
Bank
Stock.
$61,720
35,305
$407,223
$42,250
584,255
79,948
25,740
1,413,355
282,063
Total.
$101,627
560,555
31,433
207,381
19,989
49,085
60,550
49,211
80,221
$4,445,043
$184,964
103,655
57,542
75,742
2,318,100
88,316
64,670
0,091
6,897,915
167,060
260,938
557,643
23,065
808,663
157,231
64,123
12,365,525
29,942
66,671
2,064,649
855,986
135,676
$24,474,556 $2,377,611
$26,852,167
Value or Assessed Real Estate.
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
Total.
$373,883
$394,830
$768,713
1,638,316
708,290
2,246,606
71,351
82,588
153,939
391,130
804,330
095,460
40,647
106.149
146.796
118,400
245,466
863,866
73,420
172,000
245,420
68.820
114,069
182,889
142.840
188,004
330,844
$9,416,423
$7,687,926
$17,104,349
$660,005
$656,696
$1,107,391
142,500
184,225
326,725
154,617
193,531
348,148
201.805
176,068
' 466,863
4,118,630
1,606,600
6,625,320
113,210
145,466
268,676
157,470
188,481
345,001
17,089
64,417
81,506
12,846,777
7,011,073
10,860,850
413,050
642,450
056,600
403,710
202,409
786,200
778,310
403,420
1.181,730
33,450
85,670
119,120
1,434,411
478,404
1,012,816
201,255
64,339
365,504
193,710
. 261,748
446,468
22,592,585
21,491,315
44,083,900
40,205
70,380
110,645
142,160
68,604
210,764
8.273,647
2,283,371
5,557,018
2,040,355
1,414,160
3,454,524
346,920
262.055
608.975
$50,465,621
$37,734,006
$88,199,627
30
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AoaBBOATBS or Poixs, Pbopbrtt, Taxes,
COUNTIES. CITIES
AND TOWNS.
Total j
Valuation
of
Absbbsed
Estate
MatI,
1894.
1 Tax for State, County, and City ob Town
Purposes, including Oysblayinob.
Rati
OF
Total
Tax
PER
$1,000.
On
Personal
EAUte.
1
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
Total.
Fbamklin — Con.
Northfleld,
$870,840
$1,316
$9,879
$984
$12,179
$12 80
OraDge, .
2,807,100
10,090
40,439
8,388
53.917
18 00
llowe.
185,372
550
2,694
480
3,724
17 SO
Shelburne,
002,841
3,007
10,084
842
18.033
14 SO
8hatesbary» .
160,785
439
8,214
266
8,919
22 00
StiDderlaod,
412,050
442
8.071
452
8,966
0 00
Warwick,
805,970
086
4.002
844
6.332
16 30
Wendell, .
282,100
084
8.058
808
4.960
20 00
Whately, .
411,065
963
8,970
528
6.461
12 00
Totals,
$21,649,802
$07,012
$252,568
$28,414
$342,989
-
Hampden.
Agawam, .
$1,202,355
$2,867
$17,164
$1,266
$21,287
$16 50
Blandford,
430,380
1,638
5.248
446
7,332
16 00
Brimfield,
405.090
1,028
6,186
642
7,755
17 76
Chester, .
542,605
1,136
7,008
890
9,029
15 00
Ohlcopee, .
7,943.420
1
31,990
77,620
7,710
117,829
13 80
GranTllIe,
841,902
1,916
6,960
510
8,876
23 00
Hampden,
410,571
776
4,151
400
6,327
12 00
Holland, .
90.597
182
1,630
98
1,910
1
90 00
Holyoke, .
26,754,765
1 103,409
297.863
19,064
421,286 ;
16 00
Longmeadow, .
1,122,560
1,095
9.569
1.188
11,852
0 50
Ladlow, .
1,047,147
' 3,236
9,749
1,154
14,139 <
12 40
Monson, .
1,730,378
1 9,480
20,080
1,966
81,535 !
17 00
Montgomery, .
142,185
288
1,489
150
1,927
12 SO
Palmer, .
2,721,478
13,506
31,944
8,424
48.873
16 70
Russell, .
512,825
2,201
4,978
434
7,613 '
14 00
Southwick,
■
509,576
1 978
6,773
534
8,285 '
15 25
Springfield,
56,449,425
148,386
1
529,007
1 20,246
706,639
12 00
Tolland, .
140,.'>87
' 630
1.991
160
2,690
18 00
Wales, .
277,436
700
2,212
432
3,344
10 50
WestfJeld,
7,621,667
35,099
94,469
5,746
135,314 ,
17 00
West Springfield, ..
3,810,510
4,984
48.363
3,0S0
56.427
' 14 00
Wilbrahara, .
744,651
1.492
6.699
762
8.953
$l.63r.222
11 00
Totsls,
$115,051,794
$366,985
$1,190,146
1
$80,092
1
-
— - —
— —
—
1
1
~—~j:r~- —
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 19.
31
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number Number
of of
Horaee | Cows
AancMcd. I Asacued.
Namber
of
Sheep
Aaseesed.
Number
of Number
Neat Cattle of
other Swine
than Cow8 | Awesied.
Asseseed. ;
Number
Number
of
of
Dwelling
Acres of
HouaeB
Land
Aaaeaaed.
Aaaeaaed.
fiS6
823
146
388
182
2M
200
150
331
8,574
677
350
288
281
850
259
223
57
1,733
499
356
552
101
580
126
337
8,112
117
177
1,322
538
285
725
602
100
780
123
613
248
146
601
12,960
1,236
720
840
420
548
576
858
102
556
753
821
878
226
771
117
688
471
881
171
1,001
091
562
12,706
12,821
292
88
407
989
39
40
78
1
58
11,205
15
626
194
836
10
222
94
5
2
47
27
90
83
76
102
857
2
156
188
S5
7
20
2,579
252
127
241
489
43
117
49
52
306
5,044
229
422
829
294
78
254
195
105
• 62
109
209
488
124
180
49
187
27
230
90
216
106
220
213
133
34
120
38
79
74
44
86
2,673
165
128
102
46
56
123
80
22
54
133
105
158
46
142
81
117
168
30
40
159
87
59
4,152
2,060
387
1,018
125
315
123
146
163
185
197
8,142
486
219
219
341
2,066
228
207
61
3,870
427
802
685
62
903
157
240
8,564
93
162
1,997
974
208
22,610
19,364
20,299
15,518
13,888
16,057
8,196
22,239
19,159
12,076
NUUBBR AND
Value or Fowl
AS8E88BD.
Number.
Value.
I
401,975 1
14,000
30,132
20,677
21,588
12,800
27,000
11,800
7,428
8,688
13,456
16,011
25,709
8,701
17,200
8,518
17,889
16,807
18,473
9,256
26,011
9,425
12,824
853,343
1,906
$935
l,60.'i
802
3,275
1,072
1,220
562
650
334
1,425
427
453
136
29,052
<l 10,954
7,964
$3,186
8,167
1,385
87
11
1,100
440
4,914
59
664
199
1,632
410
1,110
330
1,857
748
6,047
2,180
19
8
545
272
76
38
3,798
944
1,436
385
60
18
2,067
1,034
884
358
87,376
$11,995
32
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aqoregates of Polls, Propektt, Taxes,
COUNTIES,
AND TO^
CITIES
- — - 1
nuxbbb op
Residents Assessed
ON Property.
Number of Non-
residents Assessed
ON Pbofbbtt.
■ Number of Persons
Assessed.
iVNB.
IRE.
Indi-
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
Indi-
viduals.
1
All
Others.
Total.
i
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
t
Total.
Hamprh
Amherst, ....
909
10
928 ■
, 83
-
83
1,011
347
M58
Belcbertown, .
480
10
490
158
23
181
1
671
181
862
Chesterfield, .
160
1
170
66
1
67
237
65
292
Cnmmington,
183
7
190
88
3
41
1
281
42
273
Easthamptoo,
611
80
550
76
4
80
630
609
1,239
Enfield, .
192
22
214
1
44
2
46
260
151
411
Goshen, .
70
1
71
44
1
45
116
20
136
Qranby, .
185
1
186
94
-
94 '
280
I
59
330
Greenwich,
142
-
142
66
1
8
69
1
211
36
247
Hadley, .
413
4
417 '
99
2
101
518
204
722
Hatfield, .
265
35
300
70
23
93
393
212
605
Huntington, .
239
27
266
56
12
68
334
154
488
Middlefleld. .
83
8
86 .
' 34
1
3
37 '
1
123
36
159
Northampton,
2,168
112
2,280
1
250
12
262 1
2,542
2,175
4,717
Pelham, .
130
1
131
{ 130
2
182 '
263
19
282
PUinfleld,
114
6
120 ,
: 47
4
51
171
83
204
Prescott, .
113
15
128
70
14
84
212
1
28
240
South Hadley,
527
54
581
1
78
1
24
102
i 683
670
1,853
Southampton,
241
6
247
76
3
79 1
1
826
96
421
Ware,
701
82
783 '
79
1
7
80'
869
1,172
2,041
Westhampton,
114
4
118
1
54
18
67
55 1
185
S3
S08
Williamsburg,
350
18
368 1
1
47
8
423
240
603
Worthington,
174
3
177
41
-
41
218
37
255
ToUls,
8,473
470
8,943 ;
1
1,800
164
1.964 ;
1
10,907
1
6,508
17,606
Middlesex
.
1
1
1
1
!
1
Acton,
503
8
511 ,
1
79
3
82
593
316
009
Arlington,
884
122
1,006
1
362
63
425
1 l.«l
1,243
2,074
Ashby,
323
12
335
82
2
84
419
68
472
Ashland, .
321
39
300
123
47
170
530
821
851
Ayer,
856
49
405
111
27
138
543
360
912
Bedford, .
253
26
279
73
10
83
362
131
4gs
Belmont, .
817
60
377
145
36
181 ,
558
456
1,014
Billerica, .
458
10
468
87
4
91
659
296
855
Boxborough,
88
1
89 1
1
57
-
67
146
22
108
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 19.
33
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Continued.
Xnmber
ot Male
Tax
on each
Male Poll.
Value oi
A8PB88BD Personal
Estate.
Value ov Assessed Real Estate.
Polls
AMeeoed.
Excluding
Resident
- Bank Stock.
$618,503
Resident
Bank
Block.
$93,733
Total.
1
' 1
- 1
$712,286
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
Total.
1,0W
$2 00
$1,569,865
$850,440
$2,410,295
675
200
115,175
115,175
322,380
388,635
711,015
184
200
57,167
-
57,157
83,206
147,163
230,369
1»5
2 00
63,805
-
63,805
126,260
106.770
232,039
1,0»
200
615,662
66,120
580,782
1,379,495
511.022
1,890,517
298
2 00 I
221.620
-
221,620
239,675
146,965
885,680
81
200 1
1
21,672
-
21,672
30,016
86,936
116,960
218
200 1
54.800
-
54,800
133,616
236,894
370,409
ia»
200
76,065
-
76,065
80,580
100,970
181,560
Ul
2 00 ,
1
117.125
-
117,126
307,560
641,770
849,330
447
200 ,
214,801
-
214.891
303,076
420,479
723,564
844
200 1
116,120
-
116,120
224,076
168,716
392,790
108
200 '
61,790
-
61,700
60,896
77,970
147,866
3,781
200 1
2,142,102
305,504
2.447,606
4,737,690
2,907,283
7,644.873
112
200 '
1
22,043
-
22,043
66,246
96,869
151.104
141
200 1
40,210
-
40,210
41,373
78,508
119,881
126
200
22,6n
-
22,677
44,305
95,685
139,890
1,088
200
1
312,105
-
312,10a
1.043,850
631,286
1,676,136
281
200
73,077
-
73,077
184,970
281,872
416,842
1,725
200
1,024,035
80,410
1,104,445
2,036,126
943,760
2,979,886
129
200 ,
42,133
-
42,183
73,746
118,706
192,461
513
200 1
184,063
-
184,063
1 464,500
229,486
693,986
U9
300 1
74.821
-
74,821
1 92,250
134,700
226,960
13,306
— 1
$6,190,651
$644,767
$6,736,418
$13,632,089
$0,249,762
$22,881,801
646
$200 ,
$214,075
.
$214,976
$838,810
$429,640
$1,268,450
1.847
200
1,748,420
$41,700
1,790,120
3,029,574
2,733,280
' 6,762,804
213
200
1
06,797
-
96,797
160,085
225,305
394,390
680
2 00
131,806
-
131,806
688,260
374,236
1,062,486
656
2 00
1
218,423
39,600
268,023
709,354
387,533
1,096,887
307
200
112,106
-
112,106
607,763
372,498
880,251
684
200 1
056.075
966,075
1,362,326
1,316,315
2,677,640
"
2 00 '
879,811
379,811
858,418
664,630
1,413,048
"1
200 '
1
39,657
—
39,657
51,325
145,637
196,962
u
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Agqreoates of Polls, Propebtt, Taxbs,
COUNTIES,
CiTIKS
Total
Valuatioh
OF
A8SXB8BD
Estatb
MatI,
1894.
1 Tax fob Statb, Couhtt, and City ob Town
PUBP08B8, nrCLUDZNG OVBRLATIHOB.
1
Ratb
OF
Total
Tax
AKD TOWNB»
On
Personal
Estate.
OnBeal
EsUte.
On
Polls.
Total.
PER
$1,000.
Hak^kibb.
1
Amhenli . . • •
$3,122,581
$18,711
$46,398
$2,186
$62,206
' $19 25
Balohflrtowti, .
826,190
1,647
10,167
1,160
12,064
14 30
OhMterfleld, .
287.526
914
8,686
368
4.068
16 00
OammingUMi, .
295,886
1,193
4,230
800
6,822
18 70
ItasthMiipton, .
2,471,299
9,292
30,248
2,040
41,680
16 00
SnAeld, .
007,250
2,669
4,628
606
7,888
12 00
Ch>ahflii, .
187,622
327
1,740
162
2,229
16 00
Granby, .
425,209
667
4,446
436
6,638
12 00
Oreenwleh,
267,615
989
2,360
278
8,627
13 00
Hadley, .
966,465
1,992
14,440
1,062
17,404
. 17 00
1
Hfttfleld, .
988,445
2,299
7,742
804
10,935
10 70
Himtlngton, .
607,910
2,187
7,463
688
10,888
19 00
Middlefield, .
209,155
772
1,847
216
2,885
' 12 50
Northampton, .
10,092,479
36,716
114,673
7,602
158,890
16 00
Pelham, .
178,147
387
2,604
224
8,215
17 50
Plalnfield,
160,091
668
1,078
282
2,923
10 00
PreMOtt, .
162,667
272
1,670
252
2,203
12 00
1
SoQth Hadley, .
1,987,240
8,809
17,757
2,102
23,258
1 10 60
1
Southampton,
489,919
1,028
6,836
662
7,421
1 14 00
Ware, . .
4,084,880
16,940
40,126
3,460
09,515
16 60
Westhampton,
234,684
680
2,463
268
3,260
12 80
WIlUamBbnrg,
878,049
2,489
0,106
1,026
12,661
13 26
Worthlngton, .
801,771
1,197
8,631
308
5,226
16 00
Totals,
$29,617,219
$102,123
$348,346
$26,612
$477,080
1 ^
MlDDLB8BX«
Acton, ....
$1,488,426
$2,687
$15,866
$i,»o
$10,833
$12 50
Arlington,
7,662,924
1 30,074
06,815
8,094
130,683
16 80
Ashby,
491,187
1 1,886
5,650
646
7,441
1 14 00
Ashland, .
1,194,292
2,412
10,444
1,100
23,016
1 18 30
Ayer,
1,864,910
8,767
16,015
1,810
21,002
14 60
Bedford, .
092,367
1.681
13,146
614
15,441
16 00
Belmont, .
8,688,716
16.297
42.842
1.368
50.607
16 00
BUlerioa, .
1,792,869
4,178
16,644
1,176
20,808
11 OO
Bozbo rough.
236,619
486
1
2,413
104
8,098
1225
1894.J
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
35
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Gontinued.
Namber
1
' Namber
1
Number
Number
of
Number
Number
of
Dwelling
Houses
Assessed.
Number
of
nuvbib and
Value of Fowl
of
1 of
Cows
Assessed.
of
Sheep
Assessed.
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
of
Swine
Assessed.
Acres of
Land
Assessed.
Abhbsbbd.
Hones
Assessed.
Number.
Value.
844
' 1,403
212
888
260
873
16,642
7,628
$2,601
566
1,428
66
472
190
496
81,876
7,786
1,046
197
463
220
291
91
160
18,667
1,682
613
230
528
200
254
129
186
18,634
804
144
429
592
-
132
98
824
7.826
8,806
1,170
234
365
15
162
96
219
10,764
1,267
607
94
307
112
120
40
78
10,287
1,110
383
334
081
17
199
176
178
15,924
3,887
1.001
155
280
72
80
64
126
11,178
1,427
700
528
906
412
373
148
387
12,991
-
-
546
360
0
91
66
277
9,246
8,418
1,867
250
340
301
207
48
282
14,760
2,444
1,222
138
242
401
211
26
114
14,166
1,184
667
1.380
013
26
146
60
2,669
21,688
850
140
131
83
84
74
28
121
14.120
167
60
177
473
300
140
106
114
12,634
1,488
508
137
881
67
08
76
106
10,840
-
-
546
004
81
167
174
664
10,078
6,041
2,416
364
788
90
206
127
214
16,008
8,280
1,292
586
739
64
260
120
894
16,670
-
-
183
351
07
137
61
114
16,7.'W
1,660
664
335
634
117
196
84
419
16,062
-
-
222
660
228
284
68
182
19,722
2,647
1,060
8,614
13,872
3,130
4,007
2,309
9,690
838,633
1
60,747
$18,381
458
1,001
_
167
61
462
i
11,926
6,892
$3,040
640
23«
-
-
836
1,076
2,819
600
830
318
466
110
164
88
242
14,703
6,040
2,974
800
409
3
68
80
421
7,414
S,048
1,974
242
106
29
27
31
444
6,116
-
-
307
520
-
92
63
284
7,900
8,877
1,680
420
173
-
1
379
460
2,609
1,026
640
422
876
27
91
162
406
16,401
6,616
2,032
133
464
76
136
30
70
6,638
2,070
1
1,108
36
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates of Polls, Pbopebtt, Taxes,
0OUXTIE3, CITIKS
XUMBBB OF
RBSIDBNTS A88B8SED
ON Propbrty.
NUMBEB OF NON-
' RB8IDBNT8 A88ES8BD
ON Property.
NUMBBB OF PbBBONB
Abbbsbbd.
ASiiJ liJW Sir
MIDDLB8BX ~ C<
9*
Indi.
viduul0.
All
Others.
Total.
Indi.
vlduals.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
1
1
For Poll
Tax
only.
ToCaL
[>n.
1
1
BurllDgtOD,
146
-
146
119
-
119
265
79
344
Cambridge,
7,123
1,090
8,222
1,183
362
1,536
9.757
18,423 ' 28,180
Carlisle, .
180
18
167
95
4
09
266
42 298
Chelmsford, .
713
84
797
210
40
250
1,047
807
1.854
Concord, .
562
02
664
117
27
144
798
693
1.401
Dracut, .
316
28
344
212
23
236
579
381
060
Dmiatable,
120
3
123
49
11
60
183
27
210
Bverett, .
2,203
63
2,256
746
86
781
8,037
3,668
6,505
Framingharo,
1,325
82
1,407
295
16
311
1,718
1,697
8.415
GrotOD, .
448
81
520
76
34
100
638
212
850
Holliston, .
404
66
559
1.%
25
161
720
667
1.277
Hopkinton,
728
20
762
148
9
157
009
499
1,408
Hudson, .
874
41
015
103
20
123
1,038
051
1.089
Lexington,
708
21
720
368
2
370
1,000
670
1.609
Lincoln, .
218
3
221
83
2
85
306
164 ' 470
Littleton, .
237
88
2T0
46
7
53
323
141 464
Lowell, .
6,248
1,160
7,417
486
94
580
7,907
18,308
26,895
Maiden, .
3.004
440
4,363
688
84
772
6,126
6,012
11,137
Marlborough,
2,104
70
2,183
165
31
196
2.379
2,412 4,791
Maynard, .
226
66
200
64
8
62 '
362
663 1,005
Medford, .
1,767
108
1,056
617
100
726
2,681
2,703
6,384
Melrose, .
1,846
35
1,881
466
18
473
2,354
1,976 4.830
Natick, .
1,666
74
1,64a
162
15
177
1,817
1.626 8.343
Newton, .
4,413
738
6,161
784
223
1,007
6,168
5,828 11,486
North Reading,
213
28
241
78
15
03
884
80
414
Pepperell,
056
66
722
08
10
117
880
488
1.278
Reading, .
740
106
855
1
161
44
206
1,060
781
1.841
Shorbom, .
241
8
240
133
4
137
386
89
476
Shirley, .
224
30
2M
77
21
08
852
164
516
Somonrille,
6,038
762
1
6,700
1,074
281
1,355
8.146
11,233 ; 19.378
Stoneham,
1,073
42
1,116
146
19
164
1,270
1.270
1,649
Stow,
190
47
237 1
65
27
92
829
134
463
Sudbury, .
280
37
317
68
81
90
416 ;
164
680
Tcwksbury,
398
1
309
211
4
215'
014
220 ; 834
-
J
1
-
^
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
37
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Namber
of Male
Tax
OD each
MalePoU.
Value ot
ExcladlDg
liestdent
Bankdtock.
AssvssBD Pbbsonai.
Estate.
Value of Abbesbbd Real Sbtate.
Polla
KmowMd.
Reaident
Bank
Stock.
Total.
BuUdtnga,
excludiDg
Land.
Land,
oxclading
BuUdlDga.
Total.
m
$2 00
$96,515
$06,515
$176,605
$243,449
$420,054
22.172
2 00
16,187,400
$520,920
16,658,820
84,722,200
26,166,100
60,877,300
141
2 00
40.217
-
40,217
120,330
186,093
306,423
884
2 00
263,740
-
263,740
082,066
759,260
1,601,345
1,132
2 00
1,083,452
60,900
1,163,352
1,605,705
1,034.675
2,640,380
655
2 00
1
216,079
-
216,079
677,685
036,465
1,514,150
m
200 1
42,063
-
42,063
78,400
168,015
241,415
4,786
2 00 <
650,900
-
650,900
6,663,100
5,196,700
11,858,800
2,557
2 00
1,554,310
70,801
1,624,611
4,128;100
2,371.680
6.499,780
563
2 00 1
1,338,743
-
1,338,743
772,175
671,745
1,443,920
915
2 00 '
1
295,757
5^709
352,526
802,650
467,071
1,269,621
1,011
200 ,
453,223
83,700
636,923
996,689
582.657
1,679,146
1,580
200 1
487,092
75,915
568,007
1,605,090
666,280
2,270,370
1,082
2 00
478,586
-
473^86
1,852,190
1,688,279
3,640,469
312
2 00 1
1
1,457.601
-
1,457.601
405,000
380,400
785,490
354
200 1
199,254
-
109,264
8a4,575
323,060
667,635
22.744
200 1
15,361,375
1,684,746
17,046,121
26,024.100
26,014,020
52,038,120
8,204
2 00 '
1
2,416,000
45,276
2,461,276
10,871,000
8,701,800
19,663,700
4,005
2 00 1
1
1 745,434
352,735
1.008,169 !
3.922.285
3,290,310
7,212,545
8»
200 :
661,044
-
661,044 1
1,090,917
363,387
1,454,304
3,756
200
' 2,296,800
-
2,296,300 '
1
6,292,325
6.700,726
12,993,060
8,U8
200
480,830
57,268
538,098 1
6,677,800
3,708,975
9,886,776
2,515
200 1
819,350
89,500
908,850
2,939,875
1,683,926
4,573,300
7,763
200
0,721,125
189,710
9,860,835
17,586,000
16,553,350
84,139,350
243
200
63,319
-
63,310
246,320
223,203
469,623
907
200
419,653
-
419,658
996,150
523,897
1,520.047
14M
200
303,255
38,000
341,255
1,889,245
1,217,708
3,106,953
2S9
2 00
80,700
-
80,709
377,950
370,605
757,565
886
200
148,525
-
148,525
317,071
253,202
570,333
14,061
2 00
8,444,000
46,000
3,490,000
28,390,350
17,208,660
40,598,900
2,00ft
2 00
805,807
42,000
437,807
1,947,625
1,632,726
3,580,350
281
2 00 '
130,602
-
180,602 >
297,762
230,366
528,118
306
2 00
220,825
-
220,825 1
1
458,460
437,360
895,820
547
200 '
232,209
-
232,209 1
507,905
648,444
1,246,349
— j-_— _-
--_— -_-_j_ -
1
_ —
- -_ ; :_-7- - -
- ~ ~- ~ z
38
POLLS, PKOPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AOOREOATES OF POLLS, PBOPEBTT, TaXES,
COUNTIES,
CITIES
' Total '
Valuation
OP
Absbssbd
Estate
MayI,
1S9<I.
1
1 Tax for State, County, and City or Town
Purposes, including Otbrlayinos.
Rate
OF ■
Total
Tax
AND TOVviMB.
On
1 Personal
1 Estate.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
1
Total.
PER
$l,0OU.
MiDDLESBX— Con.
1
1
Burlington,
$516,560
$1,332
$5,707
$346
$7,475
$13 80
Cambridge,
77,636,620
263,201
061,861
44,844
1,260,406
15 80
Carlisle, .
346,640
442
3,371
282
4.005
11 00
Chelmsford,
1,965,085
2.242
14,376
1,768
18,386
8 50
Concord, .
3,793,732
13,264
30,364
2.264
45,892
11 SO
Dracut, .
1,730,229
2,274
15,808
1,310
19,482
10 50
Dunstable,
283,478
421
2,414
254
3,089
10 00
Everett, .
12,500,700
10,024
182,625
0,672
202,221
15 40
Framingham, .
■ 8,124,391
24,360
07,407
5,114
126,980
15 00
Groton, .
2,782,663
10,710
11,551
1,106
28,367
8 00
Holliston, .
1.622,147
6,275
22,100
1,830
'30,804
17 80
Hopktnton,
2,116,069
0,064
81,583
2,022
42,669
20 00
Hudson, .
2,833,377
0,853
30,738
3,160
52,746
17 60
Lexington,
4,014,065
7,104
53,107
2,064
62,275
15 00
Linooln, .
2,243,001
11,661
6,284
624
18,500
8 00
Littleton, .
856,889
2,401
8,220
708
11.419
12 50
Lowell, .
60,084,241
206,602
005,463
45,488
1,347,553
17 40
1
Maiden, .
22,124,076
38,612
808.720
16,408
363,770
15 70
Marlborough, .
8,310,714
18,566
126,041
8,010
152,617
{ 17 40
Maynard, .
2,116,348
0,016
21,814
1,718
33,448
15 00
Medford, .
15,280,350
33,086
102,207
7,512
283,794
' 14 80
Melrose, .
0,024,873
7.WI
133.202
6,252
147,185
14 20
Natick, .
5,482,150
16,260
76,831
5,030
07.130
16 80
Newton, .
44,000,185
143,068
408.434
15.526
657,928
14 60
North Reading
632,842
1,007
7,465
484
8,956
15 90
Pepperell,
1,030,700
6,036
18,240
1,004
25,270
12 00
Reading, .
8,448,208
4,670
48,153
2.508
55.340
15 50
Sberborn, .
888,264
1,034
0,607
518
11,249
12 80
Shirley, .
718,858
1,514
6,737
672
8,923
11 83
BomervUle,
44,088,000
54,703
637,403
28,122
720,818
15 70
Stoneham,
4,018,157
8,537
60,488
4,010
82,086
10 5Q
Stow,
658,720
1,306
5,280
562
7.148
10 00
Sodbury, .
1,116,645
1
2,805
0,151
702
12.248
10 40
1
Tewksbary,
1,478,568
3,251
1
17,449
1,004
21,794 '
14 00
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
39
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
of
Number
of
,' Cowe
; Assessed.
1
Number
of
Sheep
Assessed.
Number
of
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
Number
of
Swine
Assessed.
Number
of
Dwelling
Housea
Assessed.
Number
^ of
Acres of
Land
Aesesaed.
1
I Number and
1 Valub op Fowl*
1 AB8B88BD.
Horses
Anessed.
1
' Number.
1
Value.
271
300
2
62
261
135
7,223
1,040
$520
4,»»
448
-
-
88
12,262
3,300
-
-
185
680
-
76
32
126
9,660
3,300
1,366
5S4
1,026
1
15
172
720
14,219
12,277
5.912
683
1,252
-
167
156
740
15,428
5,150
2,575
426
048
4
128
268
405
12,887
7,158
8,679
161
457
40
126
85
104
10,400
2,530
1,012
789
142
-
-
100
3,363
1,788
-
-
933
1,006
206
140
42
1,730
14,534
-
-
533
824
182
212
149
487
19,970
2,162
1,081
436
736
14
22
70
626
11,274
6,139
867
450
735
60
140
99
805
16,580
2,450
880
513
875
58
61
243
967
0,795
1
1
-
T08
1,105
48
367
685
9,381
1 6.837
2,918
845
813
■■
98
855
186
8,970
1 4.093
2,160
869
1,0M
11
238
40
247
10,640
1,158
1
579
8«411
327
2
4
76
12,157
5,916
1 960
420
M75
160
-
-
-
5,506
2,483
1
-
1,039
779
1
77
144
2,219
12,756
1,400
700
190
325
-
66
72
681
3,050
i 797
398
820
282
-
4
-
2,776
4,139
-
-
638
214
-
-
504
2,583
2,700
-
789
, 555
0
0
61
1,759
8,809
1 2,685
1,600
2,216
! 1.212
-
-
-
5,188
9,450
1
-
187
884
-
9
42
213
7,738
5,108
2.051
672
685
10
84
174
715
13,711
7,620
3,810
506
275
4
85
09
976
5,736
2,995
1,497
200
671
24
138
174
271
10,058
-
-
247
334
6
91
40
284
9,434
2,110
1,039
3,287
814
-
-
-
8,791
1,900
-
-
467
311
-
19
451
1,232
2,300
850
426
236
643
11
142
108
243
11,194
1,420
710
382
* 1,128
16
138
287
260
14,696
5,410
2,164
sn
006
4
23
113
410
13,335
1 7,006
2,836
40
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates
OF Polls,
Property, Taxes,
COUNTIES, CITIKfl
NUMRXB OF
RB8IDBNT8 ASSKSSBD
OM Pbopkbtt.
Ndxbbb of Non.
RBSIDBNTS A88B88BD
ON Pbopxbtt.
Numbbb of Pbbsoms
A88B8SXD.
AND TOWNS.
Indi-
vidnals.
AU
Others.
ToUl.
Indi.
viduaU.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
M1DDLB8KZ — Cod.
t
t
Towiuiend,
491
17
608
136
5
141
640
208
862
TyDgsborongh,
163
5
158
108
2
110
268
66
333
Wakefield,
1,249
178
1,427
368
48
411
1,838
1,403
8,241
Waltham,
2,273
363
2,686
254
64
318
2,964
4,198
7,162
WatertowD,
847
116
962
364
45
399
1,361
1,474
2,835
Wayland, .
897
17
414
181
14
145
669
271
830
Weetford,
450
7
457
154
-
154
611
839
050
Weston, .
852
83
386
88
16
54
439
247
686
Wilmington, .
861
5
866
481
7
488
864
189
. 993
Winchester, .
912
26
937
202
14
216
1,163
1,063
2.216
Wobnrn, .
2,122
128
2,250
860
42
902
8,152
2,910
6,062
Totals,
61,584
6,876
68,460
13,706
2,104
16,809
84,269
97,402
181,671
Nantuokst.
Nantacket,
' 1,258
41
1,299
610
2
612
1,911
284
2,195
Norfolk.
Avon,
820
7
827
93
6
99
426
248
674
Bellingham, .
285
1
286
180
4
134
420
168
688
Braintree,
961
20
981
230
17
247
1,228
802
2,030
Brookline,
2,418
822
2,735
263
63
326
8.061
2,730
6,791
Canton, .
674
160
824
163
81
194
1,018
717
1,785
Cohasset, .
573
14
587
160
4
154
741
292
1,083
Dedbam, .
1,046
132
1,178
827
36
362
1,640
1,169
2,709
Dover,
151
24
175
112
26
138
818
54
367
Foxboroagh, .
646
95
741
147
25
172
918
330
1,243
Franklin, .
603
270
873
178
6
184
1,067
695
1,752
Holbrook,
564
5
669
186
4
140
709
208
917
Hyde Park, .
1,333
181
1,514
864
107
471
1,986
2,157
4,142
Medfield, .
333
38
371
97
80
127
498
267
755
Medway, .
603
87
590
108
69
162
752
881
1,183
Minis,
108
31
224
112
29
141
866
172
637
Milton, .
861
170
1,031
138
28
166
1,197
752
1,949
Nendham,
813
16
829
184
14
198
1,027
516
1,643
Norfolk, .
182
182
835
4
839
1
1,021
127
1.148
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 19.
41
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Continued.
Namber
of Mole
Polls
AsaesMd
Tax
on each
Male Poll
Value op Abbessbd Personal
Estate.
135»S76
857
4S7
373
1,380
4,163
1^1
644
1.909
183
822
1,287
630
2.900
aoo i
814 I
321
1,370
1,053
254
529
$2 00
177
2 00
2,268
2 00
5,784
2 00
2,058
2 00
546
2 00
639
2 00
511
2 00
375
200
1,585
2 00
3.0M
2 00
Excluding
Resident
Bank Stock.
$122,551
56,523
703,325
4,267,800
1,277,555
292,660
210,573
1,300,985
113,618
090,950
1,328,781
i2 00
$2 00
200
200
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
200
2 00
200
2 00
200
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
$77,293,585
$048,293
$69,262
120,850
847,425
15,258,700
1,221,104
1,585,820
1,045,828
857,809
253,670
870,967
138,129
998,855
293,675
152,235
115,760
11,503,205
281,812
72,330
Resident
Bank
Stock.
$74,600
77,280
72,960
46,477
104,208
$3,919,565
$105,276
$100,000
141,960
126,786
130,180
75,850 •
Total.
Valttb or Assessed Real Estate.
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Bnildinga.
Total.
$197,151
56,523
780,605
4,340,760
1,824,032
292,660
210,573
1,300,985
113,518
990,950
1,522,989 1 1
$508,575
139,400
3,046,275
8,261,300
3,864,105
724,645
549,915
867,205
483,568
2,836,875
4,667,940
$413,240
186,155
1,990,205
6,164,000
8,027,263
478,815
386,200
724,760
836,538
2,378,300
3,273,225
$81,213,150
$1,053,560
$00,262
120,350
847,425
15,353,700
1,363,064
1,585,820
1,172,614
357,809
258,670
501,097
138,129
998,855
293,676 !
152,235
116,700
11,688,565
281,312
72,830
$194,855,566
$1,249,735
$422,190
337,565
1,945,526
14,081,700
1,674,280
1,095,010
8,002,515
244,145
878,186
1,430,185
575,460
4,601,850
742,265
808,065
477,620
3,319,100
1,455,240
259,320
$167,687,246
$702,925
$240,800
228,580
1,884,476
27,765,760
949,540
888,880
1,936,931
231,979
479,914
829,470
410,552
2,930,925
263,734
286,595
259,045
3,788,866
1,026,644
183,621
$921,816
326,555
5,086,480
14,425,300
6,801,868
1,203,460
986,115
1,601,966
820,106
6,215,175
7.941,165
$362,892,812
$1,952,660
$668,999
666,145
3,330,000
41,837,460
2,623,820
2,688,390
4,988,446
476,124
1,368,100
2,269,655
986,012
7,532,775
095,999
1,004,660
736,665
7,107,956
2,481,884
442,941
42
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AOORBOATKS OF POIXS, PrOPKBIT, TaXKS,
COUNTIKS,
crriKS
Total
Valuation
of
Absbssbd
SSTATE
MatI,
1894.
Tax fob State, County, and Citt ob Town
Purposes, including Gtbrlatinos.
1
Kate
OF
Total
Tat
AMU lUvTXiD.
On
Personal
BsUte.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
Total.'
PER
$1,000.
MIDDLB8SZ — OOD.
Towniend,
$1,118,066
$1,713
$12,808
$1,058
$15,664
$14 00
Tynfiborongh,
882,078
075
5,616
354
6,045
17 25
Wakeitold,
5,817,066
14,831
05,608
4,536
115,060
10 00
Wftlthanip .
18,766,060
70,754
285,132
11,568
817,454
16 80
Watertown,
8,216,400
10,860
108,371
4,116
127,847
15 00
Way land, .
1,406,120
4,007
1^848
1,002
22,087
14 00
Wcatford,
1,146,688
3,158
14,042
1,278
18,478
15 00
Weatonp .
2,802,050
10,408
12,786
1,022
24,166
8 00
WUfflington, .
088,624
1,476
10,640
750
12,875
18 00
Winohester, .
6,206,125
15,825
83,443
8,170
102,438
16 00
Wobnrn, .
0,464,154
27,878
145,826
7.088
181,187
18 30
Totals,
$48^,605,062
$1,265,666
$5,542,218
$271,752
$7,060,636
-
Nantucket.
Nantaoket,
$3,006,220
$10,586
$10,526
$i.n4
$31,776
$10 00
Norfolk.
1
Atod, . . . .
$782,261
$1,816
$12,507
$074
$14,887
$10 00
Belllngham,
686,405
1,664
7,860
746
0,670
18 00
Braintree, '
4,177,425
18,804
71,028
2,760
02,002
21 60
Brooklinet
57,101,150
108,456
627,152
8,326
728,034
12 60
Canton, .
3,886,884
20,173
87.853
8,442
50,968
14 80
OohaMOt, .
4,160,210
14,580
28,771
1,288
80,648
020
I>edbam, .
6,111,060
17,560
82,066
8,818
104,858
16 80
Dover,
838.033
2,505
3,314
866
6,185
700
Fozborough,
1,6U,770
3,728
10.063
1,644
25,833
14 70
Franklin, .
2,760,752
6,564
36,154
2,574
45,202
16 00
Holbrook,
1,124,141
3,177
22,678
1,260
27,115
28 00
Hyde Park,
8,581,630
14,583
100,078
5.800
130,361
14 60
Medfleld, .
1,280,674 1
2,037
0,060
1,018
13,015
1 10 00
Medway, .
1,246,805
3,425
24,680
1,628
20,683
22 50
Millie.
852,325
1,505
0,575
642
11,722
13 00
Milton, .
18,746,510
87,200
53,311
2,740
148,841
760
Needliam,
2,768,106
4,520
80,840
2,106
46,484
16 10
Norfolk, .
515,271
076
6,082
612
7,470
ISM
1
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
43
Etc, as Assessed Mat 1, 1894
— Continued.
Number
of
Number
of
Cows
Aaaeaeed.
Nnmber
of
Sheep
AMoaaed.
Number
of
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
Number
of
Swine
Assessed.
Number
of
Dwelling
Houses
Assessed.
Number
of
Acres of
Land
nuxbsr and
Yalub of Fowl
A88B8SXD.
Horeea
AiMMed.
Nnmber.
1
Value.
401
403
78
108
497
20,066
2,886
$720
190
318
24
94
29
160
9,812
1,800
720
515
291
-
8
149
. 1,516
8,967
1,725
870
1.844
882
-
22
382
4,112
7,227
700
400
665
281
-
2
47
1,491
2,020
8,500
3,500
854
808
102
90
125
404
9,146
2,710
813
438
753
48
116
45
471
18,000
1,093
437
400
832
-
72
425
841
10,629
2,686
1,074
205
180
2
17
78
333
9,977
4,508
2.251
4T2
S40
-
-
23
1,046
8,079
-
-
952
?62
-
10
421
2,454
7,580
6,283
2.760
38,640
80,706
1,085
3,582
7,915
86,461
486,655
147,087
$68,600
462
491
716
108
-
1,140
19,886
1,206
$604
157
114
_
„
68
840
2,442
1,994
$706
281
480
-
45
25
813
10,967
1,420
710
5T5
448
-
-
154
1,145
7,968
-
-
1,515
474
125
-
-
2,247
8,761
300
100
614
426
-
65
479
861
11.102
-
-
424
270
2
54
22
600
5,916
-
-
1.014
1,183
-
26
778
1,357
11,947
-
-
242
563
12
64
301
148
8,958
4,249
2,124
424
360
-
55
82
640
12,047
6,920
2,768
640
684
25
100
71
970
16,015
-
-
209
162
11
225
521
4,280
658
326
574
177
21
-
-
2,010
2,856
-
-
831
420
1
57
44
324
8,075
1,625
650
847
487
-
10
31
632
6,736
8,575
1,787
205
480
2
76
62
240
6,966
520
260
1,025
804
6
26
410
965
6,728
700
850
486
518
68
52
1,121
810
7,714
10,723
5,484
190
396
4
77
23
195
9,193
5,188
2,594
44
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates of Polls, Property, Taxes,
COUNTIES, CITIES
AND TOWNS.
Norfolk — Con
Norwood,
Qalncy, .
Randolph,
Sharon, .
Stoaghton,
Walpole, .
Wellealey,
Weymonth,
Wrentham,
Totals,
Plymouth.
Ablngton,
Bridgewater,
Brockton, .
Carver,
Duxbury, .
Eaat Bridgewater,
Halifax, .
Hanover, .
Hanaon, .
Hingham, .
Hall, .
Kingaton, .
Lakevtlle, .
Marion, .
Marshfleld,
Mattapolaett,
Mlddleborough
Norwell, .
Pembroke,
Plymouth,
Plympton,
RocbcBter,
Rockland,
Scltnnte, .
NUMBEB OF
RSSIDSMTS ASSEBSSD
ON Pbopbrtt.
Indi.
vlduala.
710
3,393 !
750
335
898
493
589
2,550
568
22,735
935
MO
4,735
219
539
662
160
496
353
1,205
170
391
261
221
648
354
1,157
445
367
1,199
189 .
255 '
1,085
680
All
Others.
15
186
160
13
79
72
6
217
85
TotaL
numbsr of non-
Rbsiobntb Assessed
02v propbbtt.
Indi.
vlduala.
AU
Others.
Total.
Number of Pbbsoks
AS8BS8BD.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
2,300
39
136
605
57
94
57
64
55
30
15
50
1
59
76
17
171
50
5
351
8
3
51
18
•
725
143
7
i
1
150
875
701
1,676
3,579 1
959
33
1
992
4,571
4,448
9,019
910
77
17
1
94
1.004
618
1,022
348 >
349
14
263,
611
190
801
977 '
139
21
160
1,187
8S3
1,970
565
1,806
32
1,838
1,903
357
2,260
595 1
1
197
7
204
799
473
1.272
2.767 1
256
34
290
3,057
1,582
4,619
648 '
184
70
264 '
902
277
1,179
25,131
1
7.272
727
7,999
1
33,130
21,234
54,364
1
974
148
10
168 '
1,182
024
1,756
782
128
37
165 ;
947
634
1,481
6,340
406
50
456
1
5,796
6,470
12,260
276
187
54
241
617
49
566
633 1
263
42
305
988
163
1,101
719'
809
28
837
1,566
326
1,882
162
698
-
698
860
36
896
560
107
25
132
692
165
847
408 '
697
54
751
1,159
99
1.258
1,241
335
17
852
1,593
639
2.132
185
602
52
654
639
206
1.045
441
102
21
123
564
160
724
262
222
2
224
486
66
552
280
143
23
166
446
62
608
724
470
46
516 '
1,240
114
1,364
371 '
102
2
104
476
73
64S
1.328 '
237
61
298
1,626
972
2,698
495
239
51
290
785
123
908
372 '
743
35
778
1.160
82
1,232
1,550
367
50
417
1,967
1,368
3,326
197
154
11
165
862
35
397
258
137
6
143
401
86
436
1,136 '
169
32
201
1,387 t
832
2,169
693
413
12
425
1,118
183
1.301
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
45
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
of Hale
Polla
AascBsod.
Tax
on each
tf ale Poll.
Value of Assessed Personal
Estate.
1,230
6,920
1,140
487
1,514
751
820
3,150
T27
36,038
$2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
2 00
Excluding
Resident
Bank Stock
Resident
Bank
Stock.
Value of Assessed Real Estate.
1.301
$2 00
1,0S9
2 00
9,428
2 00
344
200
520
2 00
888
2 00
155
2 00
576
2 00
393
2 00
1,195
2 00
817
2 00
488
2 00
348
2 00
328
200
S07
2 00
287
2 00
2,009
2 00
1
479
200
875
200
2,807
2 00
166
2 00
231
2 00
1,670
2 00
654
2 00
$595,970
2,520,500
291,350
274,534
415,550
400,563
2,507,300
1,137,164
I
174,127
$43,058,494
i
$369,223
851,325
2,767,^6
151,404
268,450
284,479
28,339
332,039
128,914
981,404
126,006
558,320
63,041
119,650
143,695
584,020
553,241
197,580
89,400
1,741,000
42,521
82,225
540,680
142,940
$595,970
$208,780
2,729,280
-
291,350
-
274,534
-
415,550
-
400,563
-
2,607,300
303,156
1,440,320
28,462
202,589
$1,114,624
$44,173,118
$28,020
$397,243
-
351,325
123,189
2,890,786
-
151,404
-
268,450
-
284,479
-
28,839
-
332,039
-
128,914
58.616
1,040,080
-
126,006
-
558,320
-
63,641
-
110,650
-
143,695
-
534,020
41,610
504,851
-
197,580
1
-
89,400
226,800
1,967,800
-
42,521 ,
-
82,225
29,200
569,889
-
142,940
1
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
$1,612,815
$781,485
6,862,775
7,226,400
1,042,975
536,326
766,156
541,954
1,454,860
948,842
1,090,166
568,706
2,176,100
1,864,222
3,632,129
1,515,983
807,872
437,286
Total.
$57,185,967 $58,485,002
$1,362,950
1,258,326
9»484,0dl
170,318
789,589
802,973
77,923
593,256
296,930
1,781,672
1,236,190
686,676
168,524
368,600
600,760
501,656
1,775,382
404,375
297,806
2,936,850
129,336
146,597
1,744,870
1,200,140
$564,465
674.080
9,084,146
461,492
387,358
373,640
160,776
255,432
195,046
1,132,136
1,519,109
287,795
278,418
290,090
391,385
418,036
1,463,113
288,682
264,190
1,434,276
134,781
288,636
639,134
695,805
$2,894,300
14,088,175
1,579,300
1,298,100
2,403,702
1,658,871
4,040,322
5,048,112
1,246,168
$115,670,969
$1,917,415
1,932,405
18,568,196
621,810
1,176,947
1.176,613
238,690
848,687
491,976
2,913,807
2,755,299
878,370
436,942
668,690
1,091,135
919,690
3,238.495
687,957
561,995
4,371.125
264,117
434,232
2,384,004
1,895,946
46
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AOOBEOATES OF P0LL8, FSOPBBTT, TaXXS,
COUNTIES, CITIES
AND TOWNS.
Total
Valuation
OP
Assessed
Estate
MatI,
1894.
Tax por State, Countt, and City or Towk
Purposes, includinu Ovbrlatings.
1
Rate
OP
Total
Tax
PER
$1,000.
On
Personal
1 Esute.
On Real
Estate.
.On
Polls.
TotaL
NOBPOLK — COO.
Norwood, .
$2,000,270
$10,131
$40,703
$2,478
$63,312
$17 00
Qnincy, .
16,817,455
48,035
247,962
11,840
807,827
17 00
Randolph »
1,870,650
6,710
80,964
2,298
88,062
10 60
SharoDi •
1,572,643
2,787
18,620
874
17,181
10 80
Stoughton,
2,819,252
7,272
42,065
3,028
62,866
17 60
Walpole, .
2,060,434
6,247
21,731
1,602
28,480
18 10
Wellealey,
6,647,622
87,681
44,443
1,640
73,664
11 00
Weymoath,
6,488,432
26,647
03,368
6,318
126,338
18 60
Wrentham,
1,447,747
3.141
19,301
1,464
23,806
15 50
Totals,
$160,844,087
$534,789
$1,652,558
$72,076
$2,259,878
-
Pltxodth.
Abtngton,
$2,314,658
$7,606
$36,236
$2,602
$46,344
$18 90
Uridgewater, .
2,283,730
5,270
28,986
2,118
86,874
16 00
Brockton, .
21,458,981
66.960
365,807
18,856
441,613
19 70
Carver, .
773,214
1.766
7,167
488
9,401
11 60
Duxbury, .
1,445,307
8,409
14,945
1,040
19,394
12 70
Baet Brldgewater,
1,461,092
4,410
18,239
1,776
24,425
15 60
Halifax, .
267,038
868
3,106
310
3,784
13 00
Hanover, .
1,180,726
6,813
18,679
1,162
20,044
16 00
Hanson, .
620,890
2.037
7,773
786
10,696
16 80
Hingham, .
3,953,887
14,978
43,035
2,890
60,403
14 40
Hull, .
2,881,305
2,104
46,013
634
48,761
16 70
Kingston, .
1,431,090
9,432
6,030
076
16,438
10 80
Lakeville, .
600,583
687
4,719
496
6,002
10 80
Marion, .
778,340
1.436
7,904
466
9,796
12 00
Marshfleld,
1,234,830
2,155
16,367
1,014
19,536
16 00
MatUpoisett, .
1,468,710
3,789
1
6,488
574
10,761
7 00
Middleborough,
8,833,346
9,370
61,008
4,018
64,896
15 76
Norwell, .
885,537
2,669
8,943
958
12,470
• 18 00
Pembroke,
651,805 <
1,670
10,383
750
12,808
18 60
Plymonth,
6.338,025
33,050
73,435
4,614
111,108
16 80
Piympton,
306,638
667
1
3,621
832
4,420
18 33
Rochester,
516,457
1,110
6,863
462
7,485
13 60
Rockland,
2.958,893
10,600
44,342
3.340
68,282
18 60
Scituate, .
2,038,885 '
1
1,815
24,078
1,308
27,201
12 70
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
47
Etc., as Assessed Mat
1, 1894
— Continaed.
Number
of
Number
of
Cows
Ameaoed
Number
of
Sheep
Aseeated.
Number
of
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
AaseMed.
•
Number
of
Swine
Aflseesed.
Number
of
Dwelling
Houses
Assessed.
Number >
of
Acres of
Land
1
Assessed. '
1
6,165
nuvbbr and
Valub op Fowl
A88B8SBD.
HorsM
Aaaewed.
Number.
Value.
86B
866
1
7
115
776
2,790
$1,396
1,428
666
-
4
-
3,486
6,468
-
-
350
214
-
1
288
836
6,767
-
307
300
10
61
62
397
13,746
1,062
530
548
846
6
9
106
1,121
9,272
2,864
1,167
884
514
6
45
66
586
12,548
8,693
1,846
422
802
-
-
34
651
6,772
-
-
1,119
820
29
51
269
2,400
9,315
1,835
1,006
406
639
117
61
504
18,739
9,310
4,666
14,582
12,221
312
1,013
4,867
25,168
230,948
58,921
$28,467
468
202
-
22
21
917
6,810
2,358
$1,179
570
466
30
96
162
782
16,165
-
-
1,806
677
-
44
82
6,066
12,018
2,012
996
202
140
18
28
70
290
20,215
-
-
424
227
27
62
60
687
18,414
2,184
1,092
475
846
-
66
66
626
9,646
1,767
883
146
186
57
35
18
167
9,296
-
-
434
261
12
28
50
481
9,187
4,773
2,015
258
146
8
28
25
844
9,087
906
492
644
676
209
67
425
1,112
12,973
-
-
148
67
80
10
3
722
1,329
326
96
an
188
-
40
68
419
10,227
-
-
836
251
37
92
87
274
17,360
-
-
131
86
-
11
-
299
7,608
-
-
461
421
73
143
70
801
15,929
7,876
8,937
214
188
-
24
^ •
352
9,654
-
-
1,016
677
29
149
108
1,396
38,993
3,824
1,530
458
278
63
44
64
445
12,288
3,149
1,574
266
177
19
42
28
376
12,886
1,355
677
772
470
24
20
17
1,603
60,800
-
-
146
86
-
87
25
162
8,656
812
325
306
263
34
91
46
267
18,466
-
-
576
280
8
30
1,198
6,768
2,602
1,251
437
328
184
29
48
804
0,696
8,250
4,140
48
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Agorboates of Polls, Pbopertt, Taxes,
COUNTIES, CITIES
Number of i
REeiDB}«T8 Assessed
ON Property.
1 Number of Non- '
' Residents Assessed
ON Property.
1
Number op Persons
Assessed.
AND TOWNS.
Indi-
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
Indi.
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
ForPoU
Tax
only.
Total.
Plymouth— Con.
Wareham,
675
17
592
724
12
736
1,328
291
1,619
West Bridgewater,
419
4
423
150
6
155
678
143
721
Whitman,
• *
858
280
1,088
175
"
186 1
1,274
870
2,144
Totals,
19,224
2,266
21,490
8,927
749
9,676
31.166
14,600
45,766
SOPFOLK.
1
Boston,
35,304
11,252
46,556
8,964
694
4,658 1
1
51,214
121,979
173,193
Chelsea, .
2,818
158
2,976
965
80
1,045
4,021
6,914
10,935
Revere, .
827
74
901
882
87
969 1
1.870
1,425
3,295
Wlnthrop,
599
14
613
537
28
665 '
1,178
549
1,727
Totals,
39,548
11,498
51,046
6,348
889
7,237 '
58,283
130,867
189,150
WOBCESTBR.
Ashburnham, .
453
19
472
156
15
171 1
643
260
903
Athol,
1,231
116
1,347
154
14
168
1,515
944
2,459
Anburn, .
238
13
251
167
26
183
434
173
607
Barre,
552
14
566
109
6
115
•
681
251
932
Berlin,
243
5
248
78
7
85
338
71
404
Blackstone,
422
313
735
183
14
197
932
1,296
2,228
Bolton,
214
21
235
111
15
126
361
76
437
Boylston, .
155
1
156
100
2
102
258
77
335
Brookfield,
643
SO
573
71
3
"1
647
566
1,213
Charlton, .
471
-
471
125
5
130 1
1
601
202
803
Clinton, .
1,181
158
1,339
143
22
165
1,504
2,143
3,647
Dana,
162
S3
195
71
16
87 1
282
73
365
Douglas, .
419
8
427
162
11
173 1
600
257
857
Dudley, .
287
11
298
70
8
78,
376
498
874
Fltchburg,
3,013
518
3,531
360
44
404 1
3,935
4,980
8.915
Gardner, .
1,372
57
1,429
139
7
146 ;
1,575
1,865
3,440
Grafton, .
668
20
688
100
7
107,
795
785
1,5S0
Hardwick,
320
7
327
91
5
96
423
451
874
Harvard, .
265
38
303
84
23
107 1
410
111
621
Holden, .
412
8
420
198
10
208 1
628
299
927
Ilopedale,
134
11
145
55
1
50
201
262
403
nubbardston, .
358
32
390
188
5
143
533
131
664
Lancaster,
434
20
454
129
17
146
600
37
637
Leicester, .
449
71
520
109
22
131 ■
651
656
1.207
Leominster,
1,608
215
1,723
127
50
177
1,900
1,417
3,317
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
49
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Continaed.
Number
of Male
Tax
on each
Male Poll.
Value oi
1
1 Excluding
Residfui
Bank Stock
$428,585
• Assessed
Estate.
Resident
Bank
Stock.
1
1
$67,284
I*£USONAL
Value of Assessed Real Estate.
Polls
Aiaeaaed.
Total.
$495,869
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
$835,610
Land,
excluding
buildings.
$589,850
Total.
672 '
$2 00
$1,425,460
448
2 00
143,766
~
143,766
' 491,264
333.238
824,502
1.728 ,
2 00
562,624
30,800
593,424
2,087.370
944.800
3,032,170
28,573
-
$11,733,186
$605,469
$12,338,655
$32,216,879
$23,524,804
$55,741,683
I39J89
$2 00
$191,040,700
$13,324,492
$204,365,192
1
1 $301,611,000
$422,132,850
$723,743,850
8,796 1
1 00
2,468,200
104,164
2,672,364
12,178,750
7,418.960
19,692,700
1,977 1
1 00
835,080
-
385,080
1 3,024,700
8,339,650
6,364,350
919 1
1 00
133,240
183,240 ^
2,046,720
2,398,600
4,440.320
151,481 '
1
-
$193,977,220
$13,428,656
$207,406,876
$318,861,170
$435,280,060
$754,141,220
574
$2 00
$168,085
$38,000
$191,085
$608,826
$876,018
$888,844
1,952
1
200
730.200
90,710
820,910
1,916.645
957,786
2,874,330
380
1
2 00
102,620
-
102,520
212,255
283,818
446,073
632
2 00
254,455
96,096
360,661
561,626
627,675
1,089,200
251
2 00
61,666
1
-
61,666
248,975
176,160
426,135
1,626
200
731,560
-
731,560
1,267,866
620,876
1,888,730
261 '
2 00
61,492
-
61,492
166,915
246,703
411,618
209 '
2 00
87,352
-
87,352
195,885
284,060
429,436
945
2 00
241,281
-
241,231
1 760,110
844,711
1,104,821
558
2 00
150,220
-
169,220
311,738
448,162
759,900
3.013 1
2 00
1,607,004
73.620
1,680,624
3,644,886
1,701,616
5,246,600
194
200
, 66,305
-
65,305
185,284
93,840
228,624
52C
2 00
\ 257,787
1
-
267,787
1 417,130
863,083
780,213
720
2 00
806,086
-
306,085
521,980
216,946
738,925
7,453
2 00
3,613,251
688,710
4,201,961
7,693,600
6,667,665
14,261,166
2,970
200
' 1,085,881
142,890
1.228,771
2,486,765
1,031,475
3,517,230
1.2W ;
200
I 675,950
62,600
638,650
1 1,174,640
639,660
1,714,200
700 1
200
; 404,186
404,185
, 647,585
414,400
1,061,935
337
200
^ 228,206
-
228,206
820,152
346,697
665,749
624
2 00
264,804
-
264,304 1
526.280
412,820
938,600
309
2 00
1 903,046
-
903,046
582,176
260,355
219,860
801,626
395
2 00
j 81,681
-
81,681
310,380
679,685
512
2 00
1,882,970
-
1,832,970
1
721,190
460,211
1,181,401
921
2 00
660,271
62,977
722,248
816,491
631,327
1,346,818
2,573 I
2 00
778,176
74,700
852,875
2,837,761
1,680,888
4,618,639
50
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AGGRSaATBS OF POLLS, PrOPERTT, TaXES,
COUNTIES, CITIES
AND TOWNS.
Pltmouth— Con.
Warebam,
West Bridgewater,
Whitman,
Totala,
SnvroLK.
Boston, .
Chelsea, .
Revere,
Winthrop,
Totals,
WORCVSTEB.
Ashbnrnham, .
Athol,
Anbnrn, .
Barre,
Berlin,
Blaekstone,
Bolton,
Boylston, .
Brookfield,
Charlton, .
Clinton, .
Dana,
Donglas, .
Dndley, .
Fitchbnrg,
Gardner, .
Grafton, .
Hardwick,
Harvard, .
Holden, .
Hopedale,
Habbardston, .
Lancaster,
Leloester, .
Leominster,
Total
Valuation
OF
A88B8SSD
BSTATB
MatI.
ISM.
$1,021,329
968,268
8,625,694
$68,080,838
$928,109,042
29,166,064
6,699,480
4,578,560
$961,647,096
$1,074,929
3,696,240
648,693
1,439,751
486,801
2,620,290
473,110
516,787
1,346,062
919,120
6,927,124
293,929
1,038,000
1,046,010
18,463,116
4,746,001
2,352,750
1,466,120
893,965
],2(|^,904
1,704,672
661,366
3,014,371
2,069,066
6,871,614
Tax for State, County, and City or Toww
Purposes, including Overlayinos.
On
Personal
BBtato.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
Total.
Rate
OF .
Total
Tax
FEB
tijooo.
$T,190
$20,669
$1,344
$20,203
$14 60
1,797
10,322
896
13,016
13 60
10,800
65,186
3,456
69,441
18 80
1
$202,097
$934,083
$57,146
$1,193,826 ,
-
$2,616,874
$0,263,921
$279,678
$18,169,873 :
1
$18 80
42,187
821,320
8,796
372,808
16 40
4,746
85,680
1,977
92,262
1
18 40
2,168
71,933
919
76,010
16 80
$2,664,964
$9,742,704
$291,270
$12,698,938
-
$3,440
$16,909
$1,148
$20,497
$18 00
16,387
63,176
8,904
72,466
18 60
1,679
6,869
760
9,208
16 40
6,609
17,427
1.264
24,300
16 00
670
8,932
602
6,004
! 085
11,705
30,220
8,262
46,177
16 00
664
8,707
602
4,763
000
1,092
6,369
418
6,879
18 60
4,222
10,210
1,890
26.822
17 60
2,149
10,260
1,116
13,624
18 60
27,899
87,003
6,026
121,018
16 60
1,463
3,003
888
4,864
16 80
3,226
9,749
1,048
14,083
18 60
6,019
12,118
1,440
18,877
16 40
76,065
268,134
14,906
849,096
18 10
26,804
73,862
6,940
106,606
8100
' 10,855
29,141
2,618
42,614
17 00
4,931
12,966
1,400
. 19,287
18 80
2,442
7,124
674
10,240
10 70
4,388
16,681
1,248
81,817
1
16 60
7,224
6,412
738
14,374
800
' 1,226
8,695
790
10,710
16 00
20,346
18,114
1,024
34,484
11 10
11,666
21,649
1,842
84,047
16 00
! 14,766
78,174
6,146
08,076
17 80
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
51
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
ol
Number
of
COWB
Aeaeaaed.
Number
of
Sheep
Aaeesaed.
Number
of
NeatCaUle
other
than Cows
Aaseased.
Number
of
Bwioe
AsBeaeed.
Number
of
Dwelling
Houses
Assessed.
Number
of
Acres of
Land
Assessed.
Number axtd
Valxtb of Fowl
A88B88BD.
Horaea
AieeMed.
Number.
Value.
841
201
80
10
„
1,074
18,590
.
•
870
600
80
88
110
367
8,087
4,084
$2,042
481
336
-
13
37
1,142
3,940
898
449
12.282
8,072
863
1,321
1.717
22,042
368,966
47,073
$22,677
U,000
850
-
"
67,700
18,450
-
-
1,180
87
-
~
-
4,834
961
-
-
874
168
-
1
61
1,513
8,331
-
-
254
83
-
-
1,051
776
p
-
12,758
1,188
-
1
61
65,098
23,518
-
-
867
881
46
180
50
512
23,403
3,174
$1,687
841
420
109
106
167
1,264
18,800
4,686
2,280
274
642
-
145
107
279
9,429
4,285
1,604
&02
1,661
28
405
168
498
26,212
5,066
2,076
271
656
28
72
94
231
7,643
4,684
2,342
380
824
-
55
5
817
9,463
1,660
805
206
677
80
171
74
198
12,113
6,996
2,998
244
651
27
125
61
155
11,802
2,313
1,186
476
584
198
205
83
590
18,479
650
275
651
1,095
82
526
139
434
27,016
5,614
2,245
684
180
1
20
08
1,442
3,708
-
-
185
178
84
70
34
182
10,838
763
380
840
260
-
70
102
449
21,237
1,701
716
2S6
630
9
224
186
377
12,769
-
-
1,006
665
11
134
185
3,076
16,815
4,689
2,344
827
476
30
60
82
1,407
12,494
-
-
580
059
84
207
109
1,003
13,296
4,225
2,110
473
1,448
22
816
172
374
24,000
-
-
800
1,074
24
240
97
280
16,220
6,984
3,492
373
692
80
200
212
428
20,038
6,243
8,122
127
126
-
14
18
244
3.064
-
-
857
810
89
137
•
48
384
26,387
1,939
928
504
524
79
172
78
446
16.346
2,755
1,378
473
, 626
70
60
51
596
14,732
4,019
2,000
90S
671
26
155
76
1,543
1
17,421
938
478
52
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894,
Aggregates op Polls, Property, Taxes,
COUNTIES, CITIES
AND TOWNS.
WoRCSBTER — Cod.
Lonenburg,
Mcndorif .
Milford, .
Millbnry, .
New BraiDtre<',
North Brook flolil,
Northborou)eb,
Northbrldge, .
Oakham, .
Oxford, .
PaxtoD, .
Petersham,
PhlllipttoD,
Princeton,
Royalston,
Rutland, .
Shrewsbury, .
Bouthboroogh,
Sonthbrldge, .
Spencer, .
Sterling, .
Sturbridgc,
Sutton,
Templeton,
Upton,
Uxbrldge,
Warren, .
Webster, .
West Boylston,
West Brook field,
Westbo rough,
Westminster,
Winchendon,
Worcester,
Totals,
Number of
Residents Assessed
ON Property.
Number or Nom-
334
248
1,223
540
117
749
326
413
237
4
16
8
488
49
122
-
296
-
157
-
270
14
267
34
206
16
514
-
356
44
809
44
1,026
28
325
20
' 324
12
360
24
609
112
453
. 1
616
13
596
14
698
62
380
68
348
4
781
25
408
3
825
31
8,873
1,879
39.686
4,569
366
248
1.469
604
117
763
341
421
237
637
122
296
157
284
291
221
614
400
853
1,048
345
336
384
721
464
628
610
750
438
362
806
411
856
' 10,752
j 44,255
KESIDS
:nt8 As
SBHSED
ON
Property.
Indi-
viduals.
All
Others.
Total.
190
23
213
106
106 .
146
39
185
80
13
93
56
2
57
81
81 •
98
16
109'
91
2
93
73
73
160
27
177
76
-
76
147
147
122
4
126
116
7
123
106
26
131
110
13
123
162
-
102
80
21
101
40
6
46
111
8
119
136
14
149
117
12
129
106
28
133 '
139
23
162
138
1
189
126
8
129
101
4
106
78
16
94
68
16
73
76
4
80
136
8
189
l&o
• 7
162
137
21
158 ,
685
98
783
7,541
810 I
1
8,351
Number op rEiis<«x9
Assessed.
On
Prop,
erty.
579
354
1,644
607
174
834
460
614
310
714
198
443
283
407
422
344
676
601
899
1,167
494
466
517
883
693
667
715
844
611
432
945
673
1,014
11,535
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
110
689
90
449
1,816
3,460
837
1,684
73
247
T40
1,674
246
696
1,046
1.660
67
367
317
1,031
32
290
66
508
26
308
89
496
82
604
118
467
105
1
781
880
831
909
1.868
■ 1.116
2,282
114
60S
1 249
714
423
940
424
1,307
1 258
861
667
1,314
788
1.608
1,420
2,264
628
1,039
179
611
744
1.689
130
703
666
1,679
20,859
32.894
52.606 53.481 ■ 106,087
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
53
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Xamber
of Male
Tar
on each
Male Poll.
Vai.ue o»
1 Excluding
Resident
Bank Stock.
A89ES8BD Personal
Estate.
Value of A
lSsbssed Real Estate.
Polls
Resident
Bank
Stock.
Total.
Buildings,
excluding
Land.
$272,079
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
$415,061
ToUI.
3«3
$2 00
1
1 $76,103
$76,103
$688,030
257
2 00
77,643
-
77.643
202,303
267,229
469,582
2,742
3 00 1
813,379
$251,424
1,064,803
2,751,671
1,461,404
4,212,975
1,250
2 00
1 563,930
76,000
639,930
1,138,399
621,228
1,659,627
182
2 00 1
92,870
-
92,870
101,350
243,165
844,605
1,247
2 00 1
231,380
-
231,380
1,067,865
456,095
1,513.960
497
2 00
197,439
62,316
259,755
661,890
406.146
968,035
1,357
2 00 '
1
i 1,138,153
134,400
1,272,563
1,086,810
386,845
1,421,666
193
2 00 '
47,813
-
47,813
123,644
166,755
289,899
656
2 00 1
' 256,089
26,768
282,867
682,040
382,980
965,620
190
2 00 1
40,136
-
40,136
98,367
144,663
243,030
267
2 00 1
82,720
-
82.720
208,447
308,606
617,062
142
2 00 1
73,697
-
73,697
63,315
170,871
284,186
SOI
2 00
137,726
-
187,726
378,596
313,689
692,184
289
2 00
89,091
1
-
89,091
189,260
240,005
429,255
280
2 00
66,933
1
-
66,933
187,966
263,975
451,930
393
2 00
179,494
-
179,494
870,404
463,114
823,608
613
200
1 845,827
-
345,827
674,940
888,849
1,063,7.89
1.M7
2 00
1 773.687
56,430
829,017
1,868,676
823,760
2,692,436
1.942 '
2 00
918,311
142,440
1,060,751
1,751,685
1,021,280
2,772,815
309
2 00
93,675
-
93.676
352,950
396,820
749,770
487
2 00
227,480
-
227,480
417,626
293,026
710,660
706
2 00
365,168
-
365,168
508,816
422,696
981,410
804 1
2 00
' 210,928
-
210,928
700,800
336,922
1,037,522
534
2 00
1 204,280
-
204,280
496,290
268.931
765,221
1,005
2 00
693,190
67,950
651,140
946,660
567,615
1,514,166
1,214
2 00
56S,466
-
668,466
1,462,460
657,675
2,120,126
1,986 i
]
2 00
1,075,379
66,650
1,141,929
1,482,110
500,668
1,982,778
801 ,
2 00
295,450
-
295.450
679,910
271.700
951,610
416 '
2 00
91,963
-
91,963
420,646
250,414
671,059
1,2SI 1
2 00
350,056
67.200
407,256
1,543,621
762,021
2,305,642
m ,
2 00
79,442
41,670
121,112
278,724
306,487
585,211
1.330
2 00
491,085
122,125
613,210
996,785
662,302
1,649,087
27,414
2 00
16,028,750
1,18:>,876
17.214,626
35,083,950
34,099.000
$67,612,720
69,182,950
JR.509
-
$42,129,113
$."1.50.5,452
$45,634. 5(y)
$«7,882,382
$155,495,108
54
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
A00RBOATE8 OF Polls, Propebtt, Taxis,
Total
Valuation
1
' Tax for State, County, and City or Town
Rate
COUNTIES. CITIES
AND TOWNS.
OF
Assessed
BSTATB
MatI,
1S94.
. _
Purposes, includinu Overlj
L tin as.
TotaL
OF
Total
Tax
PER
$1,000.
On
Personal
Efltate.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
W0RCB8TER — Con ,
1
Lunenburg,
' $764,133
$1,281
$11,008
$726
$18,016
1 $16 00
Mendon, . . . .
637,175 '
1
1,010
6,974
614
7,408 !
13 00
Mllford
6,277,778
1
18,634
73,727
6,484
07,846
17 60
Mlllbury
2,299,557
11.327
29,376
2,600
48,202
17 TO
New Braintrec,
437,376
1 i
1,068
3,062
864
6.304
11 50
North Brook field, .
1,745,340
6,090
33,307
2,404
40,801
22 00
Nortbborough,
1,227,790
1 3,060
14,663
004
10,617
16 26
Nortbbrldge, .
2,694,208 1
15,652
17,486
2,714
86,852
12 30
Oakham
337,212
1
813
4,815
386
6,014 1
17 00
Oxford, . . . .
1,248,477
4,016
13,712
1,312
10,040
14 20
Paxton, . . . .
283,166
482
2,922
260
8,664
12 00
I'etersham,
599.772
852
6,326
634
6.712
1
10 90
Phillipston,
307,883
1,104
8,794
284
6,272
1 16 20
Princeton,
829,900
1,549
7,787
602
0,038
11 25
Royalston,
518,946
897
4,292
678
6,767
10 00
Rutland, . . . .
518,863
1,472
9,942
578
11.002
22 00
ShrewHbury, .
1 1,003,102
2,405
11,036
786
14,227
18 40
Soiithborough,
1,409,616
1
4,358
13,404
1,226
18,988
12 00
Soathbridi(e, .
3,521,452
15,917
61,695
3.094
70,706
1
10 20
Spencer
3,833,566
22,806
60,616
3,884
86,306
21 50
Sterling, . . . .
843.445
1,189
0,532
708
11,610
12 70
Sturbrldgc,
938,130
3,071
0,594
074
13,680
13 50
Button, . . . .
1,296,578
4.664
11,643
1,632
17,730
12 50
Teinpleton,
1,248,450
4,355
21,426
1,788
27,668
1 20 65
Upton, . . . .
969,501
2,860
10,713
1,068
14,641
14 00
Uxbridi<o
2,16,5,305
10,417
24,226
2,010
86,653
16 00
Warren, . . . .
2,6S8,590
8,413
31,878
2,428
42,210 ,
]
14 80
Webster, .
3.124,707
15,987
27,769
3,872
47,618
1 14 00
1
West Boylston,
1,247,060
4,786
16,416
1,602
21,804
16 20
West Brookficld. .
763,022
1,410
10,289
880
12,620 I
15 33
WcBtborough, .
2,712,89S
6,638
37,582
2,682
46,802
16 30
WcslraloBtcr, .
706,323
1,756
8,486
848
11,090
14 50
1
Winchendon, .
2,262,297
10,425
28,036
2.660
41,121
17 00
Worcester,
fi6,397,.'i76
261,662
1,051.581
64,828
1,368.071
1 15 30
TotalH,
$201,129,673
$71.->,81l
$2,478,185
$167,018
$3,361,014
-
.
_
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
55
Etc., as Assessed Mat 1, 1894 — Continued.
Number
of
Horsea
Number
of
Cowa
Aaaeaaed.
Number
of
Sheep
Asseaaed.
Number
of
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
Number
of
Bwine
Assessed.
Number
of
Dwelling
Houses
Assessed.
Number '
of
Acres of
Land
Assessed. ;
' nukbsr and
1 Valub 01" Fowl
A8HB8BSD.
Number. ' Value.
t 1
417
751
10
132
65
322
17,149 1
4,291
$1,289
264
496
-
116
59
233
10,839
-
-
T19
371
-
47
33
1,625
9,352 I
-
-
466
583
1
89
60
720
9,278 '
-
-
278
1,069
19
321
189
115
12,856 '
2,239
1,120
638
809
13
226
140
668
12,756
-
-
SOB
617
25
136
51
368
11,177
1,530
748
377
864
-
70
41
681
9,665
668
816
214
679
24
131
40
172
13,083 ,
-
-
387
442
-
141
93
552
16.164
6,106
1,702
165
864
16
75
38
133
9,069
2,287
1,143
886
544
249
180
134
261
23,020
3,212
1,606
220
240
65
122
59
181
14,675
1,688
844
S16
1,010
16
149
67
255
22,017
1,272
686
266
617
24
207
102
274
25,752
-
-
299
776
22
168
59
236
22,229
735
367
421
913
5
291
182
872
12,634
9,151 4,575
468
1,119
1
148
87
480
7,641
4,602
2,868
686
668
121
184
62
969
12,330
1,448
435
787
1.078
49
854
186
1,148
20,162
2,180
1,090
894
1,191
52
284
112
545
18,722
-
-
866
588
164
879
98
348
21,610
-
-
468
687
42
270
117
495
20,178
• 1
2,102
1,051
623
426
22
101
128
664
18,392
416
125
381
407
-
112
69
411
12,942
3,978
1,859
684
682
-
165
67
566
17,706
1,865
690
486
1,179
258
330
78
708
16,475
-
-
428
248
-
34
41
806
7,464
-
-
417
666
6
63
160
480
8,290
-
-
206
676
21
467
83
350
12,197
1,275 637
609
1,084
-
172
74
825
11,580
5,295
2,647
406
644
88
155
52
352
21,295
-
-
687
470
74
122
124
846
24,563
2,780
1,300
6,804
1,726
6
163
346
10,724
20,835
012,712 ]
1
1 2,175 > 1,100
81,296
89,886
2,485
10,089
5,652
44,038
132,118
$61,627
56
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates
OF Polls,
Property, Taxes,
Ndmbeb of
rb8idsnt8 assesbsd
NuMBEB OF Non-
residents Assessed
i
NuMBEB OF Persons
COUNTIES.
ON
PBOPBB
.TY.
Total.
1
ON
Pbopebty.
Assessed.
Indi.
vldoala.
All
Others.
Indi-
viduals.
AU
Others.
1
Total.
1
On For Poll
Prop- 1 Tax i ToUl.
erty. only.
Barnstable,
7,823
639
8,462
i 3,280
236
8,466
11,928
2,476
14,404
Berkshire,
11,863
953
12,816
2,105
1
292
2,397
15,213
13,101
28,314
Bristol, ....
22,622
3,528
1
26.150
1
4,484
543
5,027
31,177
1
38,859
09,586
Dnkes, ....
1,291
146
1,437
1,830
79
1
1,909 1 3,346
447
8,793
Essex, ....
30,649
6,087
45,636
1 7,374
1
852
1
8,226 54,862
63,113
117,975
Franklin, ....
7,801
425
8,226
2.206
180
2,386 10,612
5,261
16,863
Hampden,
17,408
2,042
19,450
2,460
183
2,643
1 22,093
27,704
49,797
Hampshire,
8,478
470
8,943
1,800
164
1,964
10,907
6,598
17,605
Middlesex,
61,584
6,876
68,460
13,705
2,104
15,809
84,269
97,402
131,671
Nantucket,
1,258
41
1,299
610
2
612
1,911
284
2,195
Norfolk
22,735
2,396
25,181
1
7,272
727
7,999
33,130
21,234 64,364
Plymouth,
19,224
2,266
21,490
1
1 8,927
749
9,676
31,166
14,600
45,766
Buffolk, ....
39,548
11,498
1
51,046 '
6,348
889
7,237
58,283
130,867
189,150
Worcester,
89,686
4,569
44,255
1 7,541
810
8,351
52,606
53,481 ; 106,087
Totals,
300,865
41,936
342,801
69,892
1
7,810
I
77,702 1 421,503
474,917
896,420
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
57
Etc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Recapitulation.
Nnmber
of Male
Polls
AiMsaed.
VaLUS OV A88S8SED PXBSONAL
ESTATB.
Excluding
Resldeot
Bank Stoek.
8,106
22,110
54.790
1,276
00.057
11,707
40,046
13,806
1S5,876
857
36,088
28,573
-T
$8,448,170
10,206,632
60,876,510
375,601
59,528.106
4.037.820
24,474,556
6,190,651
77,293,585
048,293
48,058,404
11,783,186
151,4S1 ' 198,977,220
88,509
43,120,118
m,740 ' $6S8,8e8,126
Resident
Bank
Stock.
Total.
Value op Assessed Real Estate.
$524,302
1,272,050
18.074
6,118,686
407,223
2,877,611
544,767
3,919,565
105,376
1,114,624
605,460
13,428,656
8,505,452
$80,808,879
$8,967,481
11,500.582
5,359,824 ' 56,286,384
894,665
65,046.882
4,446,043
26.852,167
6.785,418
81,213,150
1,053,569
44,178,118
12,888,655
207,405,876
45,684,565
$572,666,505
BulldlngB,
excluding
Land.
Land,
excluding
Buildings.
$8,006,838
20,051,312
60,128,450
2,157,392
101,170,852
9,416,423
50,465,621
13,632,039
194,856,566
1,249,735
57,185,967
32,216,879
318,861,170
87,882,382
$957,380,626
$4,733,864
15,798.940
45,610,418
1,382,130
Total.
$12,740,202
85,850,252
105,788,868
3,480,522
7.687,926
17,104.349
37,734,006
88,199,627
9,249,762
22,881,801
157.587,246
852,892,812
702,925
1.952,660
58,485,002
115,670,969
23,524,804
66,741,683
435,280,050
754,141,220
67,012,726
156,495,108
$941,574,374
$1,898,855,000
58
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AaOREOATES OF POLLS, PbOPERTT, TaXBS,
— —
- - — - - -
—
-
.
Total
Valuation
or
Tax roR Btatb. Codntt, and Citt or Town
PUBPOHBS, INCLtTDINO OVBRLATIlfgB.
COUNTIES.
ASSBSSXD
BSTATB
Mat 1,
1894. !
On Personal
Estate.
On Real
EsUte.
On Polls.
$16,210
Total.
Barnstable,
$21,707,683
$87,721
$146,697
$250,028
Berkshire,
47.419,834
156,764
534,621
44,220
735,605
Bristol
161,075,202
901.854
1,783,570
100,598
2,745,022
Dukes, ....
3,884,187
4,464
48,183
2,633
60,180
Essex, ....
248,102,809
1,017,577
2,863,725
180,114
4.061,416
FraDklin, ....
21,549,392
67,012
252,563
23,414
S4S,089
Hampden,
115,051,704
' 366,985
1,190,145
80,092
1,637.122
Hampshire,
29,617,219
i 102,128
348,345
26,612
477,080
Middlesex,
433,606,962
1,255,666
6,542,218
271,752
7,060,686
Nantaoket,
3,006,220
10,536
19,526
1,714
31,776
Norfolk
159,844,067
1
! 534,739
1,662,558
72,076
2.250,873
Plymonth,
68,080,338
202,097
934,083
57,146
1,108.326
Bnflolk, ....
961.547,096
1
1 2.064,964
9,742.704
201,270
12.608.038
Worcester,
201,129,673
715,811
2,478,185
167,018
8.861.014
Totals,
$2,471,521,505
$8,088,313
$27,482,123
$1,848,760
$86,014,205
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
59
Ktc., as Assessed May 1, 1894 — Recapitolation.
Naml>er
Number
Number
Number
of
Number
Number
of
Dwelling
Houaea
Aaaeaaed.
Number
of
Number and
Valus or Fowl
of
Horaea
Aueaaed.
of
Cowa
Aaaeaaed.
of
Sheep
Aaaeeaed.
Neat Cattle
other
than Cowa
AsaeBsed.
of
Bwine
Asaeeeed.
Acree of
Land
Aaaeaaed.
AS8BS8BD.
•
Number. Value.
3,750
2,847
157
440
99
8,495
175,540
19,509
$7,040
12,537
18,558
12,686
6,322
2,801
15.052
547,254
58,094
20,371
I4.9n
11,092
316
1,403
1,663
28,611
317,583
112,933
44,200
881
776
8,619
319
12
2,172
50,471
211
73
21,613
16^387
455
2,058
3,874
54,668
275,151
85.014
40,247
8,574
12,900
11,205
5,644
2,573
8,142
401,075
29,052
10,954
12,7m
12,821
2,679
4,152
2.000
22,610
353,343
37,376
11,995
8,914
13,872
3,130
4,607
2,800
9,590
338,633
50,747
18,381
38»049
30,706
1.085
3,582
7,916
86,461
486,655
147,087
68,600
402
491
716
108
-
1,140
19.836
1,208
604
14,582
12,221
312
1,013
4,867
25,168
230,948
58.921
28,467
12,232
8,072
863
1.321
1,717
22,042
368,966
47,078
22.677
12,758
1,188
-
1
61
65,098
23,518
-
-
81,298
30,886
2,485
10,089
5,652
44,938
912,712
132.113
61,627
198,438
182,4n
44,608
41,050
35,603
394,187
4,502,585
779,938
$385,226
60
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
AOOREOATES OF POLLS, PrOPERTT, TaXES, Etc.,
• DATE.
NUMBBB or PEB80MB
A8BB88BD.
nuhbbb of
Polls
AB8BSSED.
1
Value of Asbbsbbd Pbbbon^l
Estate.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
Male.
Fe.
Bzclnding
fiealdent
Bank Stock.
Heatdent
Bank
Stock.
ToUl.
May 1, 1861,
-
-
280,885
-
—
_
$309,897,669
Mayl
,1862,
-
-
-
276,443
-
-
-
815,311,213
Mayl
,1863,
-
-
-
275,758
-
-
-
343,500,267
Mayl,
1864,
-
-
881,220
-
-
-
824,584,847
Mayl
, 1865,
-
-
-
287,655
-
-
-
386,079,955
Mayl
, 1866.
-
-
-
806,903
-
-
-
430,272,298
Mayl
, 1867,
-
-
-
315,742
-
-
-
457,728,296
Mayl
,1868,
-
-
-
332,259
-
-
"*
469,785,363
Mayl
.1860,
-
-
-
337,342
-
-
-
503,065,988
Mayl
, 1870,
-
-
-
357,839
-
-
-
516,080,535
Mayl
, 1871,
-
-
-
374,079
-
-
-
506,154,883
Mayl
,im%
-
-
396,784
-
-
-
565,294,628
Mayl
, 1878,
-
-
-
408,131
-
-
-
537,388,751
Mayl,
, 1874,
-
-
-
415,991
-
-
-
541,348,102
Mayl
. 1875,
-
-
417,788
-
-
-
520,701.380
Mayl
, 1876,
-
-
418,770
-
-
-
507,083,288
Mayl
, 1877,
-
^
418,546
- 1
-
-
476.643.613
Mayl
, 1878,
-
~
-
423,094
1
1
-
»
450,431.046
Mayl
, 1879.
-
-
430,561
-
-
-
438,771,779
Mayl
,1880,
-
-
-
453,103
-
-
-
473,596,730
Mayl,
, 1881,
-
-
-
469,207
-
-
-
498,274,149
Mayl
,1882, . I
-
_,
_
482.844
-
-
494,689,063
Mayl,
, 1883,
-
-
498,828
-
-
-
505.185,764
Mayl
,1884, . ,
1
-
511,907
-
-
-
498.427,066
Mayl
,1885,
1
-
519,446
-
-
-
494,355,244
Mayl,
. 1886,
3-28,756 360,742
689.498
538,595
971
$467,110,636
$30,918,113
507,037,749
Mayl
, 1887,
340,000 377,039
717,939
552,853
992
484,197.384
40,691.337
524,888,721
Mayl
.1888,
347,565 394,871
742,436 573.721
1,240
491,886,284
40,397,795
538,284,079
Mayl
, 1889,
863,506 408,506
772,012 590.212
'i
2,704
501,533,637
41.137,314
1
542,670.051
TIATT5
NUMBEB OF
RESIDBNTfl AaSESBBD
ON Pbopebtt.
NuMBEB OF Non-
residents ASHESBED
ON Pbopebtt.
Nuxbeb of Pebsonb
Assessed.
Indl.
viduaU.
All
Others.
30,897
ToUl.
302,604 '
Indl-
vldaals.
All
Others.
Total.
On
Prop-
erty.
For Poll
Tax
only.
Total.
May 1. 1890. .
271,707
64,638
5,419
70,057
372.632
430.383
803,015
Mayl. 1891, .
278.028
34.313
312,341
65,563
6,375
71,938
382.553
444,018
827,471
Mayl, 1892. .
282,908
38,162
321,070
67,331
6,773
74,104
395.173 1 463,132
858,305
May 1,1893, .
292,498
37,978 830.476 1
68,212
7.2t0
75,472
405,848 475,502
881.350
Mayl, 1894, .
300,865
41,036
342.801
09,802
7,810 77,702
421,503
474,917
896,420
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
61
AS Assessed during Thirty-pour Years, 1861-94.
Value op Asbbssbd Rial Bstats.
Total
Valuation
OF
Aassfl.^BD
Tax tob State, County, and City or
Town Purposes, includino Overt.atinos.
Baildlngs,
Land,
1
Pe2Sn.l 0°.?f •
ezeludlng
exdudlDg
ToUl. 1
Estate.
On Polls.
Total.
Land.
BuildiDga.
Estate.
ABinte.
-
$552,087,749
$861,486,418
—
—
$465,833
$7,600,501
-
-
648.669,118
868,980,826
-
-
664,776
8,606,611
-
-
663,650,716
897,150,983
-
-
667,800
10,609,007
-
-
677.298,256 .
901,883,103
-
-
674,274
12,876,860
-
-
006,701,946
991,841,901
-
-
607,628
16,800,332
-
-
651,043,708
1,081,316,001
-
-
641,413
15,094,030
-
-
708,166,117
1,165,898,413
-
-
664,098
19,104,074
-
-
750,728,017
1,220,508,080
-
-
096,179
16.066,103
-
-
888,083,415 '
1,341,109,408
-
-
721,675
20.007,860
-
-
901,067,841
1,417,127,876
-
-
757,734
21,022,669
-
-
091,196,803
1,497,361,686
-
-
782,763
22,063,946
-
-
1,181,306,347
1,096,699,909
-
-
825,260
22,911,883
-
-
1,226,041,239
1,763,429,990
-
-
854,250
25.163,899
-
-
1,289,103,293 1
1,830,461,305
-
-
877,676
28,681,176
-
-
1,311,031,326
1,840,732,706
-
-
878,108
27,712,896
-
-
1,202,226,267
1,769,300,665
-
-
827,519
24,778,803
-
-
1,101,583,169
1,668,226,782
-
-
836.968
23,016,930
-
-
1,118,467,164
1,568,888,210
-
-
846,170
21,186,737
-
1,000,749,235
1,529,521,014
-
-
766,842
21,012,833
-
-
1,111,160,072
1,684,756,802
-
-
808,608
24,766,927
1
1,149,906,827
1,648,239,976
-
-
928,660
24,180,246
-
1,189,524,370
1,684,213,423
-
-
965,380
26,090,914
-
l,2:£6,lll,297
1,731,297,061
-
-
988,579
26.323,432
-
1,258,452,712 |
1.766,879,778
-
-
1.014,701
28.663,549
^ ^
1,287,993,899
1,782,349,143
-
-
1.030,223
25,850,317
$668,346.9S6 $672,147,747
1,340.498,673
1,847,531,422
$6,033,891
$18,709,706
1.067,840
26,701,437
094,300,880 713,859,007
1,407,600,086
1.982,648,807
7,884,083
20,351,775
1,096,029
28,831,837
722,570.834' 787,043,188
1,460,620,022
1,992,804,101
7,886,191
20.855,172
1,138,311
29,379,674
T61,004,60B< 707,806,814
1
1,629,499,912
2,072,170,868
7,486,027
21,559,187
1,171,886
80,216,660
^^P^,*r^ ^^ Value of Assessed Personal
Assessed. JSstate.
Value of Assessed Real Estate.
! Excladlng
Male. { Pe. Reddent
1 Bank Stock.
Resident
Bank
Stock.
Total.
Bnlldlnga,
ezdading
Land.
Land,
excluding
Bnlldlnga.
ToUl.
607,602
631,247
061.M0
675,209
«n,740
7,481 . $618,013,816
2,716 626,362,223
688,381,023
. . 647,660,402
633,368,126
$40,083,504
41,134.638
41,038.809
41,024,814
80,303,379
$653,996,819
566,496,761
679,369,392
588,676,216
672,666,605
$794,704,300
887,417,603
878,276,021
021,123,958
1 057,280,626
$805,483,417
841,127,909
875,879,677
918,539,855
941,574,374
$1,600,137,807
1.678,545,512
1,753,655,698
1.839.663.813
1,898,855,000
62
POLLS, PROPERTY, TAXES, Etc.
[1894.
Aggregates of Polls, Pbopertt, TiJCES, Etc.,
DATK.
Monet at Intkrrst and othkb Dkbts Ddb
THK PKRSOMS AS8KS8KD UORK THAN THKT
ARB iNDKBTBD OR PAT ISTBRKST FOR,
AS VaLUBD fob ASSB88XBNT.
Money on
Hand, includ-
ing Deposita
Taxable, aa
Valued for
Assesament.
Public 8U>ckB
and Securi-
ties, aa
Valued for
Aasesament.
Secured by
Mortgage.
Unsecured.
ToUl.
Mayl,
1881, ....
.
•
.
.
Mayl,
1862, .
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1863, .
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1864, .
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1866, .
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1866. ,
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1867. .
-
-
-
••
-
Mayl,
1868, .
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1869, .
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1870,
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1871,
-
-
-
-
-
May 1,
1872, .
-
-
-
-
-
May 1,
1873,
-
-
-
-
-
May 1,
1874, .
-
-
-
-
-
May 1,
1876,
-
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1876,
-
-
-
-
-
May 1,
1877,
•
-
-
-
-
May 1,
1878, '
-
-
-
-
Mayl,
1879,
$58,360,945
$33,016,166
$93,944,109
$16,143,957
$66,863,502
Mayl,
1880,
61,314,229
34,760,516
99,529,136
16,799,736
60,771,899
Mayl,
1881,
62,609,962
37,186,797
102,334,558
19,627,440
63,823,585
Mayl,
1882,
14,693,776
45,533,297
62,562,822
24,252,351
67,074,865
Mayl,
1883,
13,770,219
48,497,016
63,231,226
22,450,578
66,273,002
May 1,
1884,
15,803,068
50,085,683
66,263,646
24,477,220
61,075,562
May 1,
1885,
18,722,602
49,889,609
69,732,600
26,358,947
61,524,661
May 1,
1886,
21,483,916
61,660,777
74,314,462
27,676,448
67,666,487
May 1,
1887,
24,516,548
61,153.582
76,278,408
20,196,700
71,118,173
May 1,
1888,
27,176,464
57,697,086
85,983,780
30,413,146
66,290,431
Mayl,
1889,
29,010,496
48,982,740
79,368,819
30,917,946
68,101,672
DATE.
May 1, 1890,
May 1, 1S91,
May 1,1892,
May 1, 1893,
May 1, 1894,
Total
Valuation
Tax roB State, County, and Citt or Town Pub-
P0BE8, INCLUDING OYERLAYINOB.
OP
Assessed
Estate.
On
Personal
Estate.
On Real
Estate.
On
Polls.
$1,208,831
1,253,213
1,291,966
1,339,123
1,343,769
Total.
$2,154,134,626
2,245.042,273
2.333,025,090
2.428,339,029
2,471,521,505
$7,657,801
7,675,906
8,100,811
8,411,016
8,088,313
1
$22,637,034
23,318,602
25,078,102
26,647,163
27,482,128
$81,608,666
82,242,721
34,466,969
86,897,292
86,914,905
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 19.
63
AS Assessed during Thirty-four Years, 1861-94 — Concluded.
stocks in
Corporations
withoat the
Sute, as
Valaed for
Aaseasment.
Number
of
Horses
Assessed.
Number
of
Cows
Assessed.
Number
of
Sheep
Assessed.
46,186;»4
SS,438,036
71,873,793
aS,304,MO
63,248,244
66,QQ2,6«6
72,278,817
6<,6A2,024
70,274,868
88,299
87,478
89,228
91,882
89,760
95.154
97,244
99,980
103,118
107,198
112,782
116,719
123,290
127,601
129,069
127,297
128,188
129,417
132,517
189,861
143.778
147,187
149,289
149,787
151,994
156,271
160,837
166,152
172,741
149,090
151,756
158,905
155,043
145,801
145,914
144,561
151,141
155,880
161,185
162,172
158,304
151,033
147,358
149.765
150,123
162,036
159,180
166,309
174,859
174,024
173,673
160,879
168,650
167,817
174,701
179,423
187,994
192,807
81,110
187,478
150,922
169,513
160.997
157.588
147,352
140,319
112.047
87,061
65,565
58,634
55,642
60,279
58.695
67.105
54,524
54,928
59,331
65.123
66,779
65,400
62,780
61,947
56,240
54,627
55,272
61,689
48.619
Number
of
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
67,044
62,156
64,494
65,600
68,884
Number
Number of
Number of
of
Dwelling
Acres of
Swine
Houses
Land
Assessed.
Assessed.
Assessed.
.
178,194
4.062,035
-
178,450
4,397,363
-
183,528
4.383.103
-
185,282
4.410,805
-
188.005
4,481,654
-
190,439
4,426,004
-
195,388
4,429,954
-
200,267
4,412,181
r-
207,045
4.461.024
'
214,871
4.438,649
-
284,333
4,447,087
-
233,787
4,453,968
-
243.290
4.451,137
-
249,788
4,461,566
-
256,814
4,454,362
261,576
4,468,112
266,974
4.448,876
269,388
4,461,157
-
272,423
4,461,476
-
276,528
4,474,674
-
280,568
4,487.769
-
286,373
4.494.559
-
291.991
4.494,311
-
300.652
4,501,162
44,670
306,246
4,504,256
43,897
316,011
4.498,060
36,798
823,800
4.502,787
34,749
330,541
4,497.123
37.561
340,457
4,404,207
Number
Number
Number
Number
of
Number
Number
of
Number
of
Acres of
Land
Assessed.
nuicbbb amd
Valui of Fowl
of
of
Cows
Assessed.
of
Sheep
Assessed.
Neat Cattle
other
than Cows
Assessed.
of
Swine
Assessed.
Dwelling
Houses
Assessed.
Assessed.
Horses
Number.
Value.
178,742
200,658
46,899
82.640
42,180
850,537
4,491.954
.
.
181,706
198,810
47,586
69,088
40,776
361,066
4,498,012
644,009
$247,655
186,113
194,060
47,092
64,887
80,886
872,545
4,504.278
799,890
331.820
101478
186,800
46,168
47,628
27,871
883,713
4,608,945
880,479
368,874
198,488
182,4n
44,808
41,069
85,603
894,187
4,502,585
779,938
835,226
PUBLIC DOCUMENT .... .... No. 10.
ABSTRACT
or THB
Certificates of Corporations
OBQANZZED UNDXB THE
GENERAL LAWS Of MASSACHUSETTS,
TOOKTHEB WITH THE
Annual Ebtubns bequired by Chapteb 106
OP THE Public Statutes,
DURING THE TEAB
1894.
PBEPABED BT THE
8B0BBTARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH.
BOSTON :
WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO., STATE PRINTERS,
18 Post Office Square.
1895.
C0mmonfamllb of Stassac^trSietls.
Oftzob of thb Sbokbtabt, Boston, Jan. 1, 1806.
To ike Honorable Senate and Bouse of BepresenkUivest
In compliance with the requirements of section 2 of chapter
106 of the Public Statutes, I have the honor to submit to the
General Court a true Abstract from the certificates required
by said chapter to be deposited with the Secretary of the
Commonwealth. The aggregate amount of capital invested in
new enterprises in 1894 is $17,170,500, and by increase of
capital, $7,898,525 additional. The whole number of certifi-
cates of incorporation issued is 497. The number of annual
certificates of condition filed is 1,838, of which 47 are dupli-
cates or omissions of a previous year.
The amount of fees paid into the treasury of the Common-
wealth in 1894 from the Corporation division of this ofiice was
$19,999.26 ; and for filing and recording certificates of limited
partnership, $48.
Respectfully,
WILLIAM M. OLIN,
Secretary of the CommonweaUh.
ABSTRACT OF CERTIFICATES OF ORGANIZATION
A^ ijor-poraiions^ under Chapter 106^ Section 21^ of the Public StcUutes.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
A. P. Leonard Company, The, .
A. H. Atwood Company, .
A. M. Kiles Shoe Company,
Alpha Puhliflhlng Company, .
American Watch Tool Company,
Aithar C. Uarvey Company, The,
Aahlaod Shoe & Leather Company,
Atlantic Lam her Company, The,
AtUeborongh Steam and Blectric
Company,
Avon Shoe Company, .
Bakers' and ConfeeUonera' Cooper-
ative AMociation, The, .
Bardwell, AoderaoQ Company, .
Bay Stale Clothing Company, The,
Bay Sute Rubber Company, .
Bay State Secnrity Company, .
Beala Leather Company, .
Belding Company,
Btgelow and Dowee Company, .
Blancliard k Watte Engraving Com
PMy.The
Boston Caeting Company, .
Boston Coal Company,
Boston Ezcarston Steamship Com
p«»y
Boston Secnrity Company,
Boston Steam Fishing Co.,
Boylsroo Pharmacy (Incorporated),
Bndt and Woods Company. The, .
Springfield,
Boston,
Brockton,
Boston,
Waltham,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Attleborongh,
Avon,
Boston,
Boston,
Worcester,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Worceeter,
$16,000
5,000
20,000
10,000
40,000
20,000
175,000
25,000
65,000
9,600
1,000
75.000
25,000
6,000
20,000
7,000
25,000
150,000
15,000
25,000
20,000
25,000
25,000
4,000
1,000
10,000
160
$100
1894.
Dee. 27,
60
100
Mar. 6,
200
100
Ang. 21,
100
100
Feb. 17,
400
100
Oct. 23,
200
100
Mar. 5,
1,760
100
Mar. 26,
250
100
Nov. 26,
650
100
Oct. 28,
95
100
Nov. 10,
100
10
Feb. 17,
750
100
Jnly 9,
260
100
Jan. 24,
60
100
Feb. 15,
200
100
Nov. 7.
70
100
Sept. 26,
250
100
Feb. 28,
1,500
100
Jan. 10,
150
100
May 19,
250
100
Feb. 26,
200
100
Jan. 22,
250
100
Oct. 8,
250
100
Sept. 15,
40
100
Apr. 3,
10
100
May 1,
100
100
Mar. 29,
1894.
Dec. 27.
Mar. 10.
Ang. 25.
Feb. 19.
Nov. 7.
Mar. 14.
May 1.
Nov. 26.
Oct. 26.
Nov. 22.
Feb. 28.
Jnly 12.
Feb. 3.
Feb. 27.
Nov. 8.
Sept. 27.
Mar. 14.
Jan. 11.
May 21.
Feb. 28.
Jan. 22.
Oct. 13.
Sept. 24.
Apr. 11.
May 1.
Apr. 6.
CERTIFICATES OF ORGANIZATION.
[1894.
Certificates of Organization^ etc. — CoDtinned.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Where Loeatod.
a
CD
s
«•
o
o
o
9
a
►£
I
&
I
o
•5
Barget & Lewis Compaoy,
Bnrt and Packard Company, The, .
Batler MiUlng Company, .
BoUriek Lumber Company, The,
C. B. Maeomber Company,
C. B. Osgood Cgmpany, The, .
C. 8. Grlevee Paint Co
Cambridge District Messenger Com-
pany, The,
Central Massachnsetts Electric Com-
ply
Chamberlln & Sawyer Co.,
Chandler Adjustable Chair and Desk
Company
Charlemont Co-operative Creamery,
Charles A. Milieu Company,
Charles A. White Company,
Charles Baker Company, The, .
Charles B. Brown Company,
Charlestown Btove Co., The,
Chas. S. Binner Company, The,
Claims Adjustment Corporation, The,
Clicquot Club Bottling and Extract
Company,
Coates Clipper Manufacturing Com-
pany,
Cochlchewick Lake Ice Company, .
CoUyer Insulated Wire Company,
The,
Composite Brake-Shoe Company, .
Co-operative Oas and Oil Stove Com
P»nyt
Courier-Citizen Company, .
CrowoU Manufacturing Company,
Cycle Improvement Company, .
D. A. Eaton Company,
D. T. Dudley and Bon Company, The,
Great Barrlngton,
Brockton, .
Lowell,
Waltham, .
Fall River,
Boston,
Amesbury,
Cambridge,
Palmer, .
Worcester,
Boston,
Charlemont,
Boston,
Boston,
Worcester,
Boston,
Boston, .
Boston,
Boston,
MiUis,
Worcester,
Lawrence,
Hopedale, .
Boston,
Boston,
Lowell,
Gloucester,
Westborough,
Boston,
Button,
$10,000
80,000
6,000
25,000
20,000
100,000
6,000
10,000
160,000
10,000
26,000
2,600
60,000
6,000
76,000
200,000
3,000
16,000
1,000
16,000
15,000
22,000
24,000
60,000
6,000
40,000
80.000
6,000
7,000
40,000
100
800
60
250
200
1,000
60
100
1,600
100
260
260
600
60
760
2,000
80
160
10
160
150
220
240
500
60
400
800
60
70
400
$100
18B4.
Mar. 2,
100
Jan. 22,
100
Deo. 21,
100
Apr. 28,
100
Apr. 80,
100
1803.
Deo. 80,
100
Deo. 26,
100
1804.
Nov. 19,
100
Jan. 11,
100
Feb. 0,
100
Feb. 7,
10
Mar. 6,
100
Feb. 8,
100
Apr. 14,
100
Apr. 17,
100
Apr. 7,
100
Aug. 14,
100
Oct. 18,
100
Deo. 8,
100
June 16,
100
Jan. 10,
100
Mar. 81,
100
Mar. 2,
100
May 31.
100
June 14,
100
Oct. a.
100
Nov. 8,
100
Dec. 7,
100
1803.
Dec. 29,
100
18M.
Dee. 7,
1804.
Mar. 8.
Jan. 84.
Dec. 24.
Apr. 80.
May S.
Jan. 1.
Jan. 5.
Nov. 24.
Jan. 10.
Feb. IS.
Feb. 9.
Apr. 6.
Feb. 12.
Aug. 13.
Apr. 21.
Apr. 11.
Nov. 23.
Nov. 7.
Dec. 12.
Jane 15.
Jan. 20.
Apr. 4.
Mar. 21.
June 5.
June 10.
Nov. 10.
Nov. 6.
8.
Jan. 6.
Dec 90.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
Certificaies of Organization, etc. — Continaed.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Where Loeated.
OQ
P4
(8
o
Davenport and Heraey Companyi
Davis and Faniiim Manafaetnring
Company,
Dean-Whltlog Elevator Co., The, .
Denamore-Yoat Company, .
Downa and Walaon Company,
E. H. Bazton Company,
B. W. Clark Company,
B. W. Walker Company, .
Barl Cranberry Company, The,
Baatein ConatmoCion Company of
Boston, The,
Eaitem Expanded Metal Company, .
Baatera Forge Co. of Maaaachnsetta,
Eaitman Clock Company, .
Edward Perklna Lumber Co.,
Elaatle Box Toe Co-operative Aaao-
elation. The, .
Emery Bemla ft Co. (Inoorp.),
Everett Cycle Company, .
F. B. Bead Company, .
F. L. Hevea Pahit Company,
F. W. Wentworth Company,
Ferdinand Fomitnre Company,
Fiedler Bilk Manafaetarlng Company,
Field, Thurber Company, .
Flfield Tool Company,
Flabar-Oharchill Company, The,
Framlngham Nanery Company,
Frank B. Fitta Manafaetarlng and
Supply Company, The, .
Frank Keene Company,
French Carriage Company, The,
Gardner Gaa, Fuel and Light Com-
p*»y
Oarratt-Ford Company,
Geo. C. Whitney Co., The,
Boston,
Waltham, .
Woreeater,
Westboroagh,
Lynn,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Nswbnryport,
Brockton, .
Boston,
Everett, .
Worcester,
Springfield,
New Bedford,
Fitchbnrg,
Boston,
Brockton, .
Lowell,
Dedbam, .
Framlngham,
Boston,
Lynn,
Boston,
Gardner,
Boston,
Worcester,
$20,000
100,000
10,000
260,000
1S,000
8,000
16,000
26,000
10,000
6,000
16,000
1,000
12,000
20,000
2,000
10,000
10,000
100,000
6,000
26,000
22,000
7,600
16,000
160,000
16,000
16,000
12,000
40,000
36,000
60.000
12,000
86,000
o
«•
OQ
O
•s
1
-a
8)
o
&
0
o
"ti'm
•
•
1^
£
A
200
1,000
100
2,600
160
80
160
1,000
100
60
160
10
120
200
100
100
100
1,000
60
260
220
76
160
1,600
160
160
120
400
360
600
120
360
$100
100
100
100
100
100
100
26
100
100
100
100
100
100
20
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
1894.
Jan. 29,
Jan. 23
Aag. 1
July 81
Deo. 27,
Nov. 24,
Jaly 21
Nov. 80
Jan. 19
Mar. 8
Feb. 6
Oct. 4
Mar. 12
Apr. 26,
Jan. 24
Aag. 6
Jan. 16
Apr. 21
Jan. 6
Aag. 16
Nov. 27
May 4
Jan. 9
Aag. 26
Aag. 6|
Jane 8
Sept. 18
Jan. 4
Apr. 12,
Oct. 24
Jan. 18,
June 1
i
1894.
Jan. 81.
Jan. 20.
Sept. 1.
Aag. 16.
Deo. 28.
Deo. 18.
Jaly 26.
Dec. 0.
Jan. 20.
Mar. 9.
Feb. 7.
Oct. 6.
Mar. 18.
Apr. 28.
Jan. 27.
Aag. 7.
Jan. 16.
Apr. 23.
Jan. 19.
Aug. 16.
Dec. 1.
May 11.
Jan. 10.
Aag. 27.
Aug. 7.
Jane 16.
Sept. 26.
Jan. 19.
Apr. 18.
Nov. 18.
Jan. 22.
Jane 2.
8
CERTIFICATES OF ORGANIZATION.
Oertificates of Organization^ etc. — Continued.
[1894.
NAliS OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
CHlbert Oonet Company, .
Oilbert Loom Company, .
Glasgow Manufaotaring Company,
Orafton Electric Company, The,
H. F. Roes Company, .
Hardy Company, .
Heath Co-operaUve Creamery Amo
elation, ....
Henry C. King Company, .
Henry C. Weeden Company,
Hermon Street Foundry Company,
Hingham Seam Face Granite Com
pany
Holmea & Blanchard Company,
Hood Bros. Company,
Horace Partridge Company, The»
Howe and Pollard Company, .
Hub Webbing Company, .
Hurl but Stationery Company, .
Hyannlaport Hotel Company, .
Investors Security Company of Boa
ton. The,
Isaac Prouty & Co., Incorporated,
J. H. Whitney Company, The,
J. N. Plkft Company, .
J. S. Turner Company, The,
Jas. W. Gifford Company,
Jenkins Rubber Company,
John Farquhar's Sona, Incorporated
Eehew-Bradley Company, The,
L. Hardy Company, .
Lawrence Equitable Co-operative
Society
Lawrence Supply Company,
Lend a Hand Publishing Company,
Lenox Electric Company, The, .
Springfield,
Woroeater,
South Hadley,
Grafton, .
Newton, .
Boston,
Heath,
Lawrence,
Boston,
Worcester,
Boston, .
Boaton,
Qnlncy, .
Boston,
Hubbardston,
Boston,
Plttsfleld, .
Boston^
Boston,
Spencer, .
Boston,
Lynn,
Rockland, .
Attlebo rough,
Holyoke, .
Boston,
Boston,
Worcester,
Lawrence,
Lawrence,
Boston,
Lenox,
a
3
I
*
i
OD
o
9
I
S
O o
« N
o
5
(8
$21,000
6(y,ooo
160,000
10,000
60,00b
6,000
1,200
20,000
110,000
6,800
15,000
66,000
2,600
200,000
10,000
6,000
60,000
7,600
2,600
200,000
2,000
16,000
65,000
20,000
80,000
25,000
80,000
26,000
2,600
6,000
7,000
20,000
210
660
1,600
100
500
60
120
200 '
1,100
68
150
660
26
2,000
100
60
600
75
25
2,000
20
160
650
200
800
260
300
250
600
60
70
200
$100
100
100
I
1894. 1894.
July 25, July 31.
July 3, July 26.
Jan. 20, Jan. 24.
100 j Sept. 27, Oct. 8.
100 , Dec. 20, ; Dec. 29.
I
100 I June 19, July 26.
10 Mar. 13, Mar. 27.
100 Oct. 22, Oct. 26.
100 I Feb. 26, Mar. 6.
100 Mar. 24, Apr. 5.
100
100
100
100
Oct. 9,
«
Sept. 7,
Jan. 13,
Jan. 6,
100 Aug. 9,
100 Dec. 8,
100 , July 16,
I
100 , Apr. 9,
1893.
100 , Dec. 15,
1894.
100 Aug. 16,
I
100 May 25,
100
Feb. 12,
100 Apr. 6,
100 Mar. 3,
100 ' Sept. 6,
100 Jan. 8,
100 Mar. 23,
100 Aug. 22,
Oct. 13.
Sept. 8.
Jan. 23.
Jan. 31.
.\ug. 10.
Dec. 12.
July 26.
Apr. 11.
Jan. 6.
Aug. 15.
June 26.
Fob. 12.
Apr. 10.
.M nr. 5.
Sept 2U
Jho. 8.
Mar. 24.
Aug. 23.
5 May 31, ' Juoc 16.
100 , Apr. 26, May 8.
100 ! Dec. 21, Dec. 24.
100
Aug. 14, I Aug. 22.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
Certificates of Organization^ etc, — Continaed.
NA&CB OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
LTman and Kellogg Co., .
Lyon Foundrv and Mannfactnring
Company, The
LyoDi Qranlte Company, .
M . Robson Leather Company, .
Manofaetarera' Engineering Com*
P«»7,
MaMachaaettfl Mills In Georgia,
tfaataaoU Clothing Company, The, .
Matthewi ICannfactariog Company,
Merchants Co-operative Expreae
Conpany of Lawrence, .
Merrill Dexter and Company Corpo.
ration,
MerrllWamea Shoe Company, The, .
Metropolitan Storage Warehonae
Company
Meyers Pntz Ponaade Company, The,
Middlesex Laai Company, The,
Milford Moulded Counter Company,
Monarch Carbonating Company,
Monroe Carter Company, .
MoDtelio Co-operative Shoe Company,
Morrison Steamboat Company, .
Matoal Gaa Light Company of West
Springfield, The, ....
K. W. Tamer Company, .
Naahna Riyar Paper Company, .
Kew Bedford Cotton Waste Corpo-
ration,
2few Bedford Improved Gold Care
Company, Incorporated, The,
Kew Bedford Tow Boat Corporation,
New England Iron & Hardware Aa-
aodatloo,
Xew England Night Lanch Wagon
Company,
New England Shoe Manafacturing I
Company, The, ....
Xpw Salem Co-operative Creamery ,
Company, . . ...
Holyoke,
Lynn,
Qnincy,
Salem,
Springfield
Boston,
Springfield
Worcester,
Lawrenoe,
Boston,
Ayer,
Cambridge,
Boaton,
Maiden, .
Milford, .
Framingbam,
Southbridge,
Brockton, .
Boston,
WestSpringfleld,
Boston,
Pepperell, .
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
Boston,
Worcester,
Lynn,
Now Salem,
(Milllngton),
o
5
CD
I
$25,000
25,000
40,000
800,000
5,000
600,000
6,000
10,000
5,000
60,000
25,000
100,000
10,000
15,0QO
50,000
7,500
5,000
2,500
25,000
100,000
10,000
250,000
75,000
1,500
6,000
1,000
5,000
5,000
2,000
«^
o
A
o
a
250
250
400
8,000
50
6,000
60
100
50
600
250
1,000
100
150
500
75
50
25
250
1,000
100
2,500
750
15
60
10
50
50
80
$100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
.
•
VM
fc.
g
It
%
o
o o
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2
C« N
««
Q
Q
1804. 1804.
July 3, July 14.
Nov. 8
Jan. 24
May 10
Jan. 6
Dec. 10
Mar. 2
Jan. 27
Sept. 24
Nov. 24
Deo. 13
Apr. 25
Jane 26
May 3
Sept. 22
Mar. 15
Mar. 30
Feb. 10
Dec. 8
Feb. 24
Sept. 6
July 26
Apr. 9
Apr. 10
May 2
May 8
June 27
100 Feb. 23
26
Jan. 6,
Nov. 16.
Feb. 15.
May 16.
Jan. 10.
Dec. 22.
Apr. 11.
Jan. 20.
Sept. 27.
Dec. 18.
Dec. 18.
May 9.
July 16.
I
JuiTe 1.
I
Sept. 27.
I Mar. 15.
Apr. 2.
Feb. 16.
Dec. 13.
Mar. 10.
Sept. 7.
July 27.
Apr. 80.
Apr. 16.
May 10.
May 12.
July 20.
Feb. 27.
Jane 1.
10
CERTIFICATES OP ORGANIZATION.
[1894,
Certificates of Organizationj etc, — Continued.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
o
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3
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fi
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IS
Norwood Preai Company, .
O. C. White Company, The, .
Oak Orove Creamery Company, The,
Original Wyman Luncheon Com-
pany. The,
P. BlodgettCo
Paine Famitnre Company,
Parker Brothera Company,
Pepperell Spring Water Company, .
Perkins Machine Company,
Phenix Printing Company,
PlerBon Frnit and Produce Company,
Pigeon Cove Co-operative Aaeocia-
tion, The
Pittafield Brass Company, .
Plymouth Shoe Co
Plymouth Stove Company,
Beading Gas and Electric Company,
Record Dry Plate Company,
Reed and Curtis Machine Screw Com-
pany,
Review Publishing Company, .
Richard Brlggs Company, .
Rlverdale Woolen Company, The, .
Royal Steam Heater Co., .
S. Armstrong Company, The, .
S. A. Freeman Company, .
S-K-C. Specialty Company,
8. S. Pierce Company,
8. W. Card Manufacturing Company,
Salem Commercial School, Incorpo-
rated,
Sanders and Barrows Clothing Com-
pany,
Scandia Co-operative Grocery Com-
pany
Scandia Granite Works, .
Norwood, .
Worcester,
Boston,
Boston,
Templeton,
Boston,
Boston,
Pepperell, .
Boston,
Springfield,
Springfield,
Bockport, .
Plttsfield, .
Plymouth,
Boston,
Beading, .
Milton,
Worcester,
Boston,
Boston,
Northbridge,
Gardner, .
SomerviUe,
Boston,
Plttsfield,
Boston,
Mansfield,
Salem,
New Bedford,
Fitchburg,
Quincy,
$6,000
16,000
7,000
10,000
8,000
180,000
40,000
1,200
5,000
6^000
6,000
3,000
5,000
10.000
25,000
50,000
7,000
20,000
25,000
120,000
150,000
5,000
15,000
5,000
12,600
1,000,000
60,000
6,000
60,000
5,000
6,000
60
$100
1804.
'Jan. 10,
160
100
May 12,
70
100
Apr. 24,
100
100
Oct. 27,
80
100
Oct. 12,
1,800
100
Dec. 26,
400
100
Sept. 4,
24
60
Sept. 26,
60
100
July 11,
60
100
Mar. 0,
50
100
Apr. 10,
300
10
Jan. 8,
60
100
Dec. 10,
100
100
July 0,
250
100
July 10,
500
100
Apr. 30,
70
100
Apr. 24,
200
100
June 10,
260
100
Oct. 22,
1,200
100
Jan. 13,
1,600
100
Sept. 25,
60
100
May 26,
160
100
Jan. 8,
50
100
1803.
Dec. 26,
125
100
1804.
Oct. 25,
10,000
100
Mar. 15,
600
100
Feb. 16.
60
100
July 23,
500
100
Mar. 19,
1,000
6
Feb. 23.
50
100
Aug. 8,
1804.
Jan. 24.
May 17.
May 14.
Nov. 7.
Oct. 17.
Dec. 28.
Sept. 6.
' Sept. 26.
July 12.
Mar. 12.
Apr. 16.
Feb. 10.
Dee. 24.
Aug. 20.
Sept. 10.
May 2.
May 2.
June 19.
Nov. 10.
Jan. 23.
Sept. 26.
June 11.
Jan. 13.
Jan. 4.
Nov. 10.
Mar. 16.
Mar. 2
July 26.
Mar. 2L
Mar. 6.
Aug. 6.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
11
Certificates of Organization^ etc. — Continued.
NAMB OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
M
o
QQ
"S
1
"§
s
2
1
«
0
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•4
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•
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^
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Q
o
Bhannon Manafaetnrlng Company, .
Bmitb-Oreen Company, The, .
Smith, If eCaaker Company,
8mlih, Wilson and Sears Paper Com-
PM>yt
Smith & Btonghton Corporation,
Smith St Winehester Company,
Sonthgate Woolen Company, .
Bpragne and Breed Coal Company, .
Springfield Planing and Moalding
Mill Co
Bpriogfleld Webbing Company,
Sprocket! Car Wheel Company,
Standard Brass Company, .
Standard Crockery and House For*
nlahlng Company, The, .
Standard Worsted Company of Low-
ell, Mase., The, . . . .
Biar Belting Company,
Sioneham €las and Blectric Company,
Suffolk Storage Warehouse Com-
ply
T. A. Peteraon Company, .
T.B.Bailey Company, The, .
Taflt, Gardner, Bhepard Company, .
Taanton Evening News, .
Taylor Goodwin Company,
Technical Company, The, .
Thompson & Norrls Company, The,
Transcript Publishing Company, The,
Tropical Cocoaoot Company, .
Tyler and If ooiton Shoe Company, .
Union Mannfacturing Company,
Union Publishing Company of Bos-
ton,
Union Telegraph
Oonpaay, The,
legi
,fl
ft Telephone
Holyoke, .
Worcester,
Boston,
Holyoke» .
Boston,
Boston,
Worcester,
Lynn,
Springfield,
Springfield,
Boston,
Cambridge,
Worcester,
Lowell,
Boston,
Stoneham,
Boston,
Worcester,
Boston,
Boston,
Taanton, .
Bradford, .
Boston,
Boston,
North Adams,
Boston,
Brookfield,
Leominster,
Boston,
Pittsfield, .
$5,000
20,000
20,000
45,000
20,000
140,000
5,000
60,000
7,000
15,000
1,200
10,000
10,000
110,000
40,000
50,000
75,000
5,000
10,000
6,100
5,000
160,000
5,000
10,000
80,000
10,000
40,000
6,000
5,000
6,000
50
$100
1894.
Sept. 18,
200
100
Jan. 4,
200
100
Apr. 12,
450
100
Oct. 30,
200
100
Feb. 6,
1,400
100
1893.
Dec. 29,
50
100
1894.
Jane 27,
600
100
Mar. 31,
70
100
1893.
Dec. 21,
150
100
Jane 19,
48
25
Nov. 7,
100
100
May 19,
100
100
Apr. 13,
1,100
100
Oct. 12,
400
100
Feb. 16,
500
100
Apr. 85,
750
100
Apr. 9,
50
100
Jan. 15,
100
100
June 27,
51
100
Feb. 12,
50
100
Jane 29,
1,600
100
Aug. 9,
50
100
Jone 15,
100
100
Nov. 27,
300
100
Jane 20,
100
100
Jan. 20,
400
100
Sept. 26,
50
100
Apr. 17,
50
100
Feb. 17,
50
100
Nov. 9,
1894.
Sept. 26.
Jan. 17.
Apr. 12.
Nov. 6.
Feb. 8.
Jan. 1.
Jane 28.
Mar. 31.
Jan. 3.
Jane 25.
Nov. 19.
May 23.
Apr. 16.
Oct. 22.
Feb. 17.
May 2.
Apr. 21.
Jan. 22.
Jone 30.
Feb. 14.
July 7.
Aag. 10.
June 26.
Dec. 11.
June 26.
Jan. 22.
Oct. 1.
July 6.
Feb. 17.
Nov. 13.
12
CERTIFICATES OF ORGANIZATION.
[1894.
Certificates of Organization^ etc. — Continaed.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
United Cordage Company, The,
United States Registration Company,
Vulcan Foundery Co-operative Com-
pany
W. A. Oraham Company, .
W. D. Wllmarth & Co., Corporation,
W. H. Wllmarth & Co., Corporation,
W. J. Davie Blectrio Company, The,
W. J. Thompson 8c Co., Corporation,
Wachusett Mills,
Walkerwood Chemical Company, .
Waltham Coal Company, .
Waltham Lumber Company,
Warren Building and Improvement
Company, The
Weinman Company, The, .
William H. King Sons Company |^
Wm. F. Morgan Company, The,
Worthington Co-operative Creamery
Association,
Ziegler Electric Company, .
Total,
Boston,
Boston,
Worcester,
Marlborough,
Attleborongh,
Attleborough,
PittsAeld, .
Boston,
Worcester,
Boston,
Waltham, .
Waltham, .
Warren, .
Boston,
Springfield,
Lynn,
Worthington,
Boston,
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$S0,000
10,000
2,000
2,600
28,000
60,000
6,000
20,000
lfi,000
10,000
80,000
18,000
50,000
10,000
6,000
60,000
2,600
25,000
o
5
$9,032,500
800
$100
100
100
20
100
25
100
280
100
600
100
60
100
200
100
160
100
100
100
800
100
180
100
600
100
100
100
50
100
600
100
100
25
250
100
1894.
Nov. 7,
Apr. 28,
June 8,
Oct. 84,
Jan. 6,
1898.
Oct. 4,
1894.
Dee. 15,
June 29,
Mar. 23,
June 28,
June 28,
May 26,
Feb. 28,
Aug. 15,
Nov. 2,
July 24,
Sept. 20,
Aug. 2,
1894.
Nov. 8.
Apr. 28.
June 15.
Oct. 25.
Jan. 18.
Jan. 4.
Dee. 27.
June 29.
Mar. 28.
July 3.
June 29.
May 31.
Mar. 10.
Aug. 21.
Nov. 9.
July 26.
Oct. 9.
Aag. 17.
Abstract of Certificates of Organization as Corporations (continued) ^
under Chapters 40^ 115 and 117 of the Public Statutes^ Chapter 404y
Acts of 1887, Chapters 134 and 429, Acts of 1888, Chapter 421,
Acts of 1890, and Chapter 367, Acts of 1894.
Academy of the Assumption,
Acushnet Club, .
Advent Christian Church, North
Westport, Mass., The,a .
Agawam Tribe, No. 6, Improved Or-
der of lied Men, of Danvers,Mass.,6
Aharvas Acham Congregation of
Lynn, Mans.,
Wellesley,
New Bedford,
Weslport, .
Danvers, .
Lynn,
1894.
Jan. 27,
May 9,
- • Sept. 21,
Apr. 12,
1894.
Mar. 21.
May 11.
Oct. 29.
May 19.
Aug. 20, 1 Aug. 21.
a AcU of 1887, Chap. 404.
b Acts of 1888, Ohap. 429 and amendments.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
13
Certificates of Organization^ etc. — Continued.
NAME OP CORPORATION.
Where Located.
5
o
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Alepb Chapter, Hetb Aleph Res Fra-
teniUy»
Aleppo Life loaaranoe Aaaoclatioii,a
American AdTanoe Olab, The, .
American College of Peychlcal 8cl-
eoee. The,
American Literary and Bodal Clab,
Tha»
American Mechanics Trade School
Association of Worcester, The,
American Wlilst Clab of Boston,
The,
Amity Clnb of Brockton, .
Amphlon Club of Melrose,
Apostolic Lutheran Chnreh of
Gloncester, Massachnsetts, The, .
Associated Charities of Lynn, The, .
AssodaSed Charities of Newton, The,
ATenne Club, The, ....
Bedford Clab» The, ....
Berkeley Temple, 6 . . . .
Boston Cricket Clnb
Boston Post Office Clerk's Matual
Benefit Association, The, e
Boston Protestant Bmployment Bn-
rean. The
Boston School of Oratory and Ex-
pression in Art, . . . .
Boston Terrier Clnb, . . . .
Boylston Abt Clab, . . . .
Brockton Cricket Clnb, The, .
Brockton Masonic Benefit Assoeia.
tlOB,C
BnlMers and Contractors Association,
Cadoaao's Neck Camp Meeting Asso-
ciation, The
Caledoslaa Maritime Provincial Club,
Cambridfe If ntual Aid Association
of the City of Cambridge, The, c .
Medford, .
Taanton, .
BoBton,
Boston,
FaU River,
Worcester,
Boston,
Brockton, .
Melrose, .
Gloncester,
Lynn,
Newton, .
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Brockton,
Brockton,
Boston,
Weatport,
Boston,
Cambridge,
$50,000
500
5,000
3.000
200
120
_
1804.
May 25,
-
Feb. 10,
-
May 9,
$100
June 28,
-
May 21,
-
July 28,
-
Jan. 6,
-
Feb. 28,
-
Jaly 16,
-
July 11,
-
Nov. 8,
-
1898.
Apr. 27,
-
1804.
May 14,
-
June 18,
-
Jan. 8,
-
Mar. 0,
-
June 16,
-
Nov. 9,
-
May 24,
-
June 14,
-
July 9,
-
Oct. 4,
-
1892.
Apr. 6,
25
1894.
Oct. 9,
25
Mar. 17,
-
Mar. 13,
-
Mar. 8,
1894.
June 12.
Mar. 13.
June 8.
July 10.
July 20.
July 31.
Jan. 13.
Apr. 14.
Aug. 10.
July 16.
Dec. 24.
Feb. 28.
June 2.
June 29.
Jan. 17.
Mar. 17.
July 10.
Nov. 30.
May 24.
July 3.
July 16.
Dec. 11.
Jan. 3.
Oct. 25.
May 8.
Apr. 18.
May 14.
a AeU of 1890, Chap. 421. b AcU of 1887, Chap. 404.
c Acts of 1888, Chap. 429 and amendments.
14
CERTIFICATES OP ORGANIZATION.
[1894.
Certificates of Organization^ etc, — Continued.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
Cambrldgeport Cycle Club,
Central BapUat Chnrch of Balem,
Ma««.,a
Charitable Barlal Association, .
Chelsea Odd Fellows Hall Asso-
ciation,
Chelsea Womaos Club,
Chestnut Hill Club, The, .
Childrens' Aid Society of Nantucket,
Chiltonville Congregational Church,a
Christian Benevolent Association, .
Church of Our Saviour in the Parish
of Middleborough, Massachusetts,
The,a
Chnrch of the Sacred Heart of Fall
River,6
Clover Club,
Clover Club of Brockton, .
Club Lafayette Corporation, d .
Cohasset Yacht Club, ....
College Settlements Association,
The,e
Columbian Co-operative Association,
The,
Commercial Telegraphers Associa-
tion of Boston,
Commercial Travellers Club of New
Bedford,
Commercial Travellers' Bastem Ac-
cident Association, / . . .
Congregation Adath Jeshumn, The,
Congregation Machsikei Hadas,
Congregation of the Bone of Israel,
The,
Congregational Church of Christ In
Halifax, Mass., The, a .
Corporation of the Alumni of Beta
Mu Delta Tau Delta, The,
Cotuit Library Association, The, g .
Cambridge,
Salem,
Boston,
Chelsea, .
Chelsea, .
Newton, .
Nantucket,
Plymouth,
Boston,
Middleborough,
Fall River,
Fall River,
Brockton, .
Cambridge,
Cohasset, .
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
New Bedford,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Lawrence,
Halifax, .
Somerville,
Cotuit,
M
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Q
$25,000
26,000
2,&00
2,600
$10
10
1883.
Oct. 23,
Not. 16,
1804.
Mar. 24,
Feb. 6,
Jan. 10,
June 25,
July 28,
Mar. 20,
Sept. 27,
Sept. 24,
Nov. 1,
1893.
June 1,
1894.
Feb. 20,
Jan. 18,
Aug. 3,
1893.
Nov. 22,
Nov. 21,
Jan. 11,
Mar. 20,
Sept. U,
Mar. 2tt,
Jan. 13,
Sept. 18,
Mar. S4,
June 11,
Aug. 8,
O
O
«
cS
1804.
Feb. 1.
Jan. 10.
Mar. 30.
Apr. 7.
Mar. 19.
July 0.
Aug. 8.
Mar. 26.
Oct. 1.
Oct. 20.
cDec. 3.
July 7.
Mar. 14.
June 5.
Ang. 10.
Jan. 6.
Dec. 26.
Jan. 22.
Mar. 28.
Sept. 20.
May 9.
Jan. 17.
Oct. 3.
Apr. 2.
Oct. 16.
BepL 7.
a Acts of 1887, Chap. 404. b P. S. Chap. 38, Sects. 48, 49 and 60. c Certificate of incorporation filed.
d Acts of 1S88, Chap. 429 and amendments. e Confirmed by Chap. 488, Acts of 1894.
/ Acts of 1894, Chap. 867. g P. S. Chap. 106, Sect. 21, and Chap. 40, Sect. 16
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT -No. 10.
15
CertificcOes of Organization^ etc. — Gontinned.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
QQ
3
%^
1
o
a
i
«
^
QQ
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•
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o
•
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Dartmouth Grange Corporation, The,
Daagfaters of the Revolution, Com-
monwealth of Maasachusettfl, .
Dedbam Smergency Nursing Aaaoei-
aUon,The,
Diamond Bleycle Club, The, .
DiTlaion No. 8 of the Ancient Order
of Hibernians of Lowell, BCas8.',a .
Baat Boston Athletic Association, .
East Taunton Congregational
ChQrch,6
Easton Orange Corporation,
Ella Reed Home,
Emmanuel Congregational Church of
Spriogfleld, Maasaehnsetts, b .
Epicurean Club of Boston and Vicin-
ity, The,
Everett Cottage Hospital, .
Palrrlew Driving Park Association, .
Pall Blver Splritoallst Boclety, The, .
Family Protective Union, c
Father Mathew Roman Catholic To-
tal Abetinence Society, The, .
Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Bt.
Pauls Church, 5 . . . .
First Baptist Church in Chloopee,
Maas^The.6
First Baptist Church of Orafton,
The, b .••••.
First Baptist Church of Middlebor-
ough, The,
First Christian Parish of Beach Bluif,
First Congregational Church of
Adams, 6
First Oottcresatlonal Church of Hoi-
Burega
ihnaetU, Tha,&
Hston
Ftist Congregational Church of Paz-
ton, l^Ms., The, ft . . . .
First Free Baptist Church of Cam-
bridge, The,6
Dartmouth,
Boston,
Dedham, .
Somerville,
Lowell,
Boston,
Taunton, •
Easton,
Sharon,
Springfield,
Boston,
Everett, .
Middleborough,
Fall River,
Boston,
Greenfield,
Rocicport, .
Chicopee, .
Grafton, .
Middleborough
Bwampscott,
Adams,
Hoiliston, .
Paxton,
Cambridge,
$5,000
6,000
600
500
$10
10
1804.
June 10
Feb. 26,
1803.
Nov. 28
1894.
Apr. 6,
Jan. 17
Apr. 24
Feb. 24
May 6
Apr. 11
Mar. 21
Oct. 1
June 5,
Apr. 6
July SO
Oct. 22,
Aug. 31
June 5
May 31
Jan. 6
Mar. 16,
1808.
Dec. 20
1804.
Mar. 8
Mar. 8
Mar. 26,
1898.
Dec. 26,
1894.
Dec. 8.
Feb. 28.
Feb. 5.
Aug. 7.
July 7.
May 8.
Mar. 8.
June 28.
Apr. 20.
Mar. 28.
Nov. 2.
June 15.
Apr. 30.
Sept. 20.
Nov. 13.
Oct. 19.
June 27.
June 5.
Feb. 23.
Apr. 17.
Jan. 6.
Apr. 13.
Apr. 4.
Apr. 9.
Jan. 8.
a Acta of 1888, Chap. 429 and amendments. b Actn of 1887 /Chap .'404.
c Acts of 1894, Chap. 367.
]
16
CaERTIFICATES OP ORGANIZATION.
[1894.
Certificates of Organization^ etc. — Continued.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Pint French CongregatlODal Church
in Haverhill, The, a .
Flnt Orthodox CongregatlODal
Church of Merrimac, The, a .
Firat Pariah in Ifalden, The, .
First Spiritualiata' Society of Salem
Massachuietts, The,
First Unitarian Society in Upton
The
Fourth Primitive Methodist Church
of Fall River, Masaachnsetta, The, a
Free Religions Association of Amer-
Oeorse Wesley Nichols Building As-
cUtr
sociation,
German Relief Asaodatlon, b
Globe Street Railway Employees'
Mutual Relief Association, c .
Granite City Club, The, .
Grattan Independent Clnb of New
Bedford, The
Groton Historical Society, The,
Guardian Life Insurance Company,
The,<l
HartBuff Association, The,
Haverhill Helping Hand AssodaUon
of The Ancient Order of United
WorlLmen, The, 6 . . . .
Hebrew United Brothers *of Fall
River
Highland Club of Melrose, The,
Highland Congregational Chnroh in
Bomerville, Massachusetts, a .
Highland Rod and Gun Club, The, .
Hills Family Genealofdcal and His-
torical Association, The,
HoUiston Grange No. 116, Patrons of
Husbandry,
Holy Ghost Hospital for Incurables,
The,
Home for Aged People in Winches-
ter, The,
Where Located.
Immanuel Hospital, The, .
Haverhill, .
Merrlmac, •
Maiden, .
Salem,
Upton,
Fall River,
Boston,
Southborough,
Boston,
Fall River,
Quincy, .
New Bedford,
Groton,
Bofton,
RoclLland, .
Haverhill, .
Fall River,
Melrose, .
Bomerville,
Boston,
Boston,
Holliston, •
Cambridge,
Winchester,
Oxford,
M
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JS
CO
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C8 M
5
18M.
Feb. 16,
Feb. 20,
Nov. 20,
May 20,
Aug. 4,
Nov. 6,
June 1,
June 21,
1883.
Dec. 19,
18M.
Sept. 28,
Feb. 10,
Apr. 28,
May 8,
Ang.22,
Apr. 2,
1803.
Oct. 18,
Dee. 28,
1894.
Feb. 16,
Nov. 13,
1894.
Mar. 2.
Mar. 7
Dee. 6.
June 4.
Sept. 5.
Nov. 15.
July 14.
Aug. 15.
Jan. 2.
Oet. 8.
Feb. 21.
June 2.
May U.
Sept. 15.
Apr. 25.
Jan. 37.
1804.
Oct. 2,
Oct. IS.
June 11,
July 19.
Nov. 28,
X/vC« !«••
Oct. 16,
Nov. 7.
June 28,
Jnly 6.
1893.
Dee. 22,
Dec 8.
Jan. Z.
Feb. 21.
Nov. 24.
a Acts of 1887, Chap. 404.
c Acts of 1894, Chap. 367.
b Acts of 1888, Chap. 429 and amendments.
d AcU of 1890, Chap. 421.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
17
CertiJUxUes of Organization ^ etc. — Continued.
NAUS OF CORPORATION.
Independent, Liberal Chureh, The, a
Indvitrial and Labor Union of New
Bedford, Incorporated, The, .
Indnatrlal School for Crippled and
Deformed Children, The,
ItaBan Society of John Boneano IH
Oalla for Matnal Aid, The, b .
lullan Workmen's Aid Aaaoeiation,
The,
Kamp Komfort EJnb — Ineorporated,
The,
Kirtland Social and Athletic Clab,
The,
Ladiea Fkther Mathew Catholic To-
tal Abetinence Benefit Society,
Ladies Spiritnaliatle IndnatrUl Soci-
ety, The
Lafkyette ClQb,
lAfayette Co-operatiTe Bank, The, .
Lawrence Liquor Dealers Mutaal
Benefit Association,
Lawrence Scientific School Assocla-
Uoo,
Lsagne of Patriots A ssociatlon. The, e
Les If isermbles Association,
f<rttonian Worklngmen's Association
of Boston,
Leyden CInb Corporation, The,
Lincoln Helping Hand of Andorer, b
Linden Congregational Church, a
Lowell, Lawrence and Haverhill
Street Railway Employees Matnal
Relief Association, 0
Lyceum League Company,
Lynn Cycle Club, The,
Lynn Fraternal Benefit Society, b
Lynn Spiritualists Association, .
If splewoodBalkUng Associatlon,Tbe,
MassaebnsetU Beta Chapter of Phi
DeltoTbeta,
a Acts of 1887, Chap. 404.
d Ultimate value.
Where Located.
Greenwich,
New Bedford,
Boston,
Somerville,
Boston,
Springfield,
Lynn,
Lawrence,
Boston,
New Bedford,
Fall River,
Lawrence,
Cambridge,
Springfield,
Lowell, .
Boston,
Plymouth,
Andover, .
Maiden, .
Lawrence,
Boston,
Lynn,
Lynn,
Lynn,
Maiden,
Amherst,
m
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$1,SOO
c 1,000,000
12,000
15
120
5,000 200
18,000
1,800
$100
d2Q0
100
25
10
1804.
Jane 2,
Apr. 26,
1893.
Nov. 13
1894.
Jan. 10
Nov. 13
Jan. 16
May 14
1893.
Nov. 23
1804.
Feb. 8
May 10
Apr. 9
Mar. 6
Apr. 12
Nov. 23
July 10
May 16
1898.
Dec. 22
Dee. 29,
1894.
Oct. 18
Apr. 23,
July 14
Mar. 1
Jan. 11
Apr. 10
Mar. 20
May 29
g
O
1804.
Aug. 8.
June 2.
Mar. 27.
July 26.
Dec. 4.
Mar. 27.
May 22.
Sept. 22.
Feb 20.
May 18.
Apr. 11.
Apr. 13.
Apr. 24.
Dec. 21.
Oct. 8.
May 26.
Jan. 2.
Jan. 10.
Oct. 27.
June 7.
July 19.
Mar. 22.
Jan. 31.
May 0.
May 3.
July 12.
h Acts of 1888, Chap. 429 nnd amendmcntfl. c Limit
Acta of IS94, Chap. 367 and acts in ameDdmcnt thereof.
18
CERTIFICATES OF ORGANIZATION.
[1894.
Certificates of Orgardxaiion^ etc. — Continued.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
WhanliOeatad.
CD
I
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HaBMchaaetts State Aaaociatlon of
Bptiituallatfl, The, ....
Haaaaaoit Cycle Club, Incorporated,
The,
MattapaD Road Clab, The,
Mazzini Social Club of Maasachaaetta,
MechanlcB Aasociation,
Mcclianlca Mutual Relief Aaaociatlon
of Stoneham, The, a
MolroBo Board of Aaaociated Charl-
tiea,
Melroae Cycle Club, ....
Memorial Hall Aaaociatlon Poat 17,
Grand Army of Republic,
Mconah Ilome for Fallen and Friend-
less Qlrla and Women, The, .
Merchants & Manufacturera Life Aa-
aociatlon, The, 6 . . . .
Morning Star Pabliahing Houie,
Mount Olive Baptiat Chnroh of Cam.
bridge, c
Muaiciana' Club,
Mutual Benefaction Fund Life Aeao-
elation, 6
Mutual Benefit Aasociation of the
Men of Lida, The,<l .
Nantucket Historical Aaaodation,
The
National Accident Company, b .
National Council of The United
Guards of Honor, The, .
Naval Order of the United Statea,
Commandery of the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts
New Bedford Bar Association, .
New Bedford Clover Club, The,
New Bedford Mechanica Social Club,
The
Now Bedford Working Men*8 Mntoal
Improvement Society, The, .
New England Association of Op>
ticianB,The
Boston,
Springfield,
Boston,
Boaton,
Marlborough,
Stoneham,
Melrose, .
Melrose, .
Orange, .
Boston,
Westfield,
Boston,
Cambridge^
Brockton, .
Boston,
Boston,
Nantucket,
Boaton,
Boaton,
Boaton,
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
Boaton,
18M.
Jan. 26,
Jan. 17,
May 10,
Oct. 23,
May 12,
Aug. 14,
Mar. 17,
May 11,
18M.
Feb. 19.
Mar. •.
July 5.
Nov. 7.
Jane 5.
SepU S.
Mar. 28.
Jane 4.
Feb. 24, i Mar. 16.
July 18,
Oct. 20,
1808.
June 28,
Jqly 30.
Nov. 7.
Jan. 11.
1804.
Nov. 7, Nov. 20.
May 24,
July 11.
Sept. 15, . Oct. 1
May 6, Sept. 15
June 28,
July 2,
Feb. 5,
Nov. 0,
Apr. 16,
June 20,
May 15,
July 17, July 28
July 0.
Joly 12.
Feb. 8.
Dee. 14.
May 10.
July 30.
May 26.
July 84,
Ang. 10.
a AcU of 1804, Chap. 367.
c Acts of 1887, Chap. 404.
b AcU of 1800, Chap. 421.
d Acta of 1888, Chap. 429 and amendmentn.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
19
Certificates of Organization^ etc. — Continued.
KAMS OF CORPORATION.
Wbore Located.
New Englaod Cotton Manufacturen'
AMoeiaUon,
New Bngland Eye and Bar Hospital,
The,
New England Peabody Home for
Crippled Children, The, .
New England Bammer Beaort Aaso-
clation,
Newton Camera Clah,
Newtowne Ciab,
Norfolk Diapentary Aeaociation,
Nonimbega Woman's Club, The,
Xorwood Yonng Men'a ChrleUan As-
■odatloD,
NowandThen Aasoelatlon,a .
Odd Fellows If ntnal Accident Asso-
ciation, The, a
Old Colony Yacht Club, The, .
Old Powder House Clnb Association
of Someryiila, The, . . . •
Open Door, The,
Oriole Social Club, The, ,
Palmer's Island Clnb, ....
Parish of Saint Chiysostom, Qalney,
Partienlar Council of the Society of
tit. Vincent de Paul of Holyoke,
Mass., The,
Patriotic Catholic Americans, The, a
Phi Sigma Society of the College of
Fhyaleians and Burgeons, The,
Plttsfleld Clnb,
PIttslleld ICaaonlc AssoctaUon, .
Plombers Supply Association of New
England,
Plymouth Club Corporation, The, .
Porters and Janitors Mutual Aid As-
sedation. The, a • . . .
Potomsfca Olub, The, ....
Prospect HUl, PrimlU^e Methodist
Church of Lawrence, • •
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Newton, .
Cambridge,
Boston,
Boston,
Norwood, •
Salem,
Boston,
Boston,
SomerrlUe,
Lowell,
Boston,
New Bedford,
Qniney, .
Holyoke, .
Boston,
Bbston, .
PttUfleld, .
Plttsfleld, .
Boston,
New Bedford,
Boston, •
New Bedford,
m
1
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o
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S|CQ
I
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1894.
Nov. 20,
Sept. 28
June 7
Apr. 6
1803.
Dec. 19
1894.
July 23
Feb. 6
Mar. 31
Dec. 16
Sept. 12
Jan. 27
Mar. 19
Jan. 22
May 23
July 6
June 1
Apr. 7
Sept. 4
June 19
Mar. 2
May 31
Aug. 14,
Feb. 3
May 14,
June 29
May 12
May 12
O
1894.
Dec. 1.
Oct. 18.
Sept. 18.
Apr. 6.
June 11.
Aug. 1.
Feb. 10.
Apr. 16.
Dec. 20.
Dec. 31.
Feb. b.
Mar. 29.
Mar. 3.
July 26.
Aug. 3.
June 15.
Apr. 18a
Oct. 6.
July 14.
Mar. 24.
June 26.
Aug. 24.
Feb. 17.
June 4.
Nov. 22.
June 26.
May 24.
a Acts of 1888, Chap. 4M and amendments.
20
CERTIFICATES OF ORGANIZATION.
[1894.
Certificates of Organization^ etc, — Continued.
NAMB OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
2
OD
2-
9
o
S
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1
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Qaeqnechan Clab, ....
Red Men's Mutual Relief Asaociation
of Btoneham, The,a .
Ridgely Protective Aa0Oclatlon,Tbe,a
Roger Cooant Co-operative Bank,
The,
Royal Aid Society, The, d .
Saint Ann's Roman Catholic Church
of Fall River, e
Saint Augustine School AssoclaUon,
The
Saint Mark's Parish Chur b of Fall
River,j7
Saint Mary's Home of New Bedford,
Saint Mary's Roman Catholic Church
of Fall River, e
Schiller Club, The
Second Advent Christian Church, g .
Second Congregational Church of
Palmer, Masa.,^ . . . .
Social Hour Club, The,
Society of the War of 1812 In the
Commonwealth of Masaachasetts,
(Incorporated), The,
Sons and Danghters of the North, a .
Sonth Bristol Farmers Club,
South Deerfield Club, The,
South End Aaaoclates, .
Spiritualist Memorial Building Asso-
ciation, The,
Springfield Rescue Mission, The,
St. Andrews Church of Wellesley, g
St. Jean Baptiste Society of North
Adams, a
St. John Baptist Association, The, A
St. Michael's Parochial Schools of
Lowell, Mass
Fall River,
Stoneham,
Worcester,
Balem, .
Lynn,
Fall River,
Boston,
Fall River,
New Bedford,
Fall River,
Boston,
Savoy,
Palmer,
Fall River,
Boston,
Cambridge,
New Bedford,
Deerfield, .
Boston,
Boston,
Springfield,
Wellesley,
North Adams,
Springfield,
Lowell,
b $1,000,000
.a
O
o
Si
Ct200
1804.
Dec. 3,
Apr. 17,
May 6,
Nov. 1,
Nov. 7.
Dec. 12,
Apr. 17,
June 21,
1803.
May 29,
18M.
Dec. 1,
Oct. 16,
Apr. 17,
Apr. 12,
May 12,
Aug. 7,
June 6,
Mar. 28,
June 28,
189S.
Deo. oO,
1804.
Feb. 0,
Apr. 2,
May 21,
Jniy 3,
Dee. 10,
Apr. 10,
1894.
Dec. 15.
May 31.
May 10.
Nov. 9.
Not. 19.
/Dec. 17.
Apr. 28.
July 17.
Jan. 2.
/Dec. 4.
Nov. 2.
Jane 0.
May 20.
Jane 13.
Sept. 10.
Jaly 5.
Nov. 1.
Joly 11.
Mar. 13.
Mar. 5.
May 2S.
Jone 19.
Oet. 22.
Dec. 22.
Apr. 11.
a Acts of 1888, Chap. 429 and amendments. b Limit. c Ultimate value.
d Acts of 1894, Chap. 367. e P. S. Chap. 38, SecU. 48, 49 and 60. / Certificate of incorpomtion filed.
g Acts of 1887, Chnp. 404. A AcU of 1804, Chap. 367 and acta in amendment thereof.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
21
Certificates of Organization^ etc. — Continued.
NAMH OF CORPORATION.
Where Located.
Standard Relief AMOciatlon, a .
Sopreme Bmployinent Bareau, The,
8tea Ollle Aaaoclallon,
Swedich Srangellcal Lutheran
Cbureh,^
8 wediahBTangelloalLatheran Church
lA Maiden. Maae.. 6 . . . .
8 wedlahBTangelleal LatheranChareh
of Olonoeater, liaae.,&
Swediah Qlee dah. The, .
Svedlah Soelal Clnh, . . . .
Teamatera' Benevolent Aaaociatlon
ofBoeton,a
Tnfta Chapter of I>elU Upallon Fra-
ternity, The,
Tomvereln Vorwftrta of Webeter, .
U nion Athletic Clnb of Brockton, .
Union BYnngelleal Church of Heath,
The,6
Union Veieran Fireman*! Aasoda-
tlon. The,
Unitarian Temperance Bodety, The,
United SpirltnallaU of America, The,
UniTenal Mutual Accident Aaaocla-
ttoo of Lowell, Maaa., e . •
Veterane Memorial Hall Aaaodation
of Poet 106, Grand Army of the
Republic, Rockpoit, Maaa., The, .
Wakefield Home for Aged Women, .
Waltham Woman'a Club Corpora-
tion, The,
Wapiti Club of Woroeeter, Maaa.,
The
Ware Driving Park Aaaodation,
Warp Draeeera Aaeoeiatlon, Number
one,<f • •
Webeter Hall AaaoeUtion, The,
Weetamoe Tacht Club,
Boeton,
Woroeater,
Worcester,
Fall River,
Maiden, .
Qlouceater,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
BomervUle,
Webster, .
Brockton, .
Heath,
Peabody, .
Boston,
Boston,
Lowell,
Rookport, .
Wakefield,
Waltham, .
Worcester,
Ware,
Lawrence,
Marshfield,
Fall River,
J4
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$1,600
18M. I 1894.
Sept. 11, ' Sept. 15.
Sept. 15,
Oct. 23.
May 25, June 28.
Sept. 10,
Jan. 15,
- Oct. 27,
July 25,
May 2,
.Jan. 11,
June 1,
I 1893.
Dec. 29,
1804.
May 16,
Mar. 17,
I 1803.
Dec. 27,
Nov. 12,
Mar. 31,
I Apr. 0,
I
I Apr. 26,
I Apr. 7,
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July 26,
Oct. 11.
Jan. 30.
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Aug. 23.
May 11.
Feb. 19.
June 4.
Jan. 11.
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Sept. 21.
$60 $-25 July 23, Aug. 31.
Aug. 2,
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Mar. 15, May 28.
a Acta of 1888, Chap. 429 and amendments
c AeU of 1800, Chap. 421.
b Acts of 1887, Chap. 404.
U And AcU of 1888, Chap. 134.
22
CERTIFICATES OF ORGANIZATION.
[1894.
OertificcUea of Organization^ etc. — Concluded.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
West Congregational Charch of
Haverhill, Maea, a . . . .
Weatfield Maeonio Aaeociatlon,
Women's Benevolent Society of
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Worcester Finnish Evangelical Lu-
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Young Men's Catholic ToUl Absti-
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Young Men's Christian Association
of dTardner, Mass., The, .
Yonns Men's Christian Association
of Hudson, Mass., . . . .
Young Men's Congressional Club, .
Zlngari Cricket Club
474 corporations, 241 with capital, 28S
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Where Located.
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1894.]
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
39
Abstract of Certificates of Increase op Capital, by Existing Corporations^
under Public StatvieSy Chapter 106^ Section 66.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
A. F. Towie sDd Son Company, The, . . . .
A. IC. MePbail PUno Company,
Bay Sute BlaonU Company, The, ....
Bay State Oaa Company, The,
Bay State lee Company
Boston Incandeecent Lamp Company, The, .
Boston Rubber Shoe Company,
Brockton Co-operative Boot and Shoe Company, The,
Chelsea Pottery U. S., The,
Dally News Pabllshlng Company, The,
Edieon Electric Illnminating Company of Boston, The,
Bdlsoo Eliectrlc Illnminating Company of Boston , The,
Edison Electrio Illamlnailng Company of Bo8ton,The,
Edison Blectric Illuminating Company of Boston , The,
Edison Electric Ulomlnating Company of Boston, The,
Edison Electric Ilhimloating Company of Boston, The,
Edison Blectric Illuminating Company of Boston, The,
Edison Electric tllnminaitng Company of Boston, The,
Edison Electric Illnminating Company of Boston, The,
Fall RlTer Iron Works Company, ....
Framlngham Box Company, The, ....
Framtngham Nursery Company, .....
(leorge W. Pronty Company, The
Oraton and Knight Manufacturing Company, The, .
Hetherston Importing Company, The,
Lexington Print Works, The,
Lloden Paper Co., The
Marlborough Building Association, ....
Masonic Building Association,
Metboen Company,
Location.
Oreenfleld,
Boston,
Worcester,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Maiden,
Brockton,
Chelsea,
Springfield,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Fall Riyer,
Framlngham,
Framlngham,
Gloucester,
Worcester,
Boston,
Lexington,
Holyoke, .
Marlborough,
New Bedford,
Boston,
Amount of
Increaee.
$50,000
40,000
1,500
a 1,500,000
4,000
30,000
b 2,000,000
2,500
6,000
10,000
c 425,000
d 103,600
« 70,000
/ 671,800
^12,000
A 46,000
< 5,000
J 5,000
327,700
500,000
5,000
5,000
5,000
200,000
10,000
1:40,000
200,000
60,000
60,000
1 310,000
Amount
Paid In.
$50,000
40,000
1,500
1,500.000
4,000
30,000
2,000,000
2,500
5,000
10,000
108,600
79,000
071,800
12,000
46,000
6,000
5,000
327,700
600,000
5,000
5,000
6,000
200,000
10,000
40,000
200,000
50,000
60,000
810,000
When
Filed.
1804.
May 2.
Feb. 7.
June 12.
Jan. 24.
Mar. 2.
Feb. 1.
Feb. 0.
Feb. 0.
Apr. 8.
Mar. 31.
Apr. 18.
Apr. 26.
Apr. 26.
Apr. 25.
Apr. 85.
Apr. 25.
Apr. 25.
Apr. 26.
May 29.
Mar. 27.
Feb. 10.
Aug. 6.
Sept. 14.
Dec. 26.
Jan. 26.
Dec. 20.
Feb. 19.
Aug. 14.
June 26.
Mar. 20.
a And Acts of 1808, Chap. 474, Sect. 4. b And AcU of 1802, Chap. 28.
e Authorized by the Board of OnM and Electric Light Commlulonors, under Chap. 227, Acts of 1892.
d Stock Issued in May, 1801. e Stock issued March 1, 1892.
/ Stock issued in Angnst, 1892. g Stock issued September 1, 1892.
A Stock issued March 1, 1808. i Stock Issued September 1, 1893.
j Stock issaed March 1, 1894. k And Acts of 1801, Chap. 247, and Acts of 1894, Chap. 254.
I P. B. Chap. 106, Sect. 35.
40
ABSTEACT OF CERTIFICATES.
[1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Increase op Capital, etc. — Concluded.
NAME OF CORPORATION.
Location.
Amount of
Increase.
Millbnry Electric Company, .
Monnt Washington Olass Company,
Mount Washington Glass Company,
Mudge Shoe Company, .
New England Morocco Works, .
Norton Emery Wheel Company, .
Onset Water Company,
Palrpoint Manufacturing Company,
Pairpolnt Manufacturing Company,
Phelps Publishing Company,
Plymouth Cordage Company,
Plymouth County Co-operatiye Creamery Company,
Reading Masonic Temple [Corporation],
Salem Storage Warehouse Company, The,
Sawyer Spindle Company, .
Scandinavian Co*operative Drug Company, The,
Somerville Journal Company,
South Truro Fish Weir Company,
Taunton Theatre Company, .
Washacum Pottery Company, The,
White Oak River Corporation, .
White Oak River Corporation, .
WItherell Shoe Company, .
68 certificates, 42 corporations.
MiUbury, .
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
Boston,
Boston,
Worcester,
Wareham,
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
Holyoke, .
Plymouth,
Brldgewater,
Reading, .
Salem,
Boston,
Worcester,
Somerville,
Truro,
Taunton, .
Sterling, .
New Bedford,
New Bedford,
Clinton, .
$2,000
17,000
60,000
70,000
16,000
82,000
a 6,000
100,000
6100,000
100,000
800,000
1,000
36,000
16,000
100,000
1,126
10,000
1,000
7,000
2,000
c 20,000
20,000
8,000
Amount
Paid In.
When
Filed.
$7,628,626
$2,000
17,000
60,000
70,000
16,000
82,000 •
6,000 !
100,000 I
I
100,000
100,000
600,000
1,000
86,000
16,000
100,000
1,126
10,000
1,000
7,000
2,000
20,000
20,000
8,000
1804.
Apr. 10.
Aug. 6.
Aug. 6.
Jan. 16.
Apr. 21.
Mar. 20.
Nov. 27.
July 26.
Aug. 6.
May 14.
May 26.
May 16.
Mar. 8.
July 13.
Aug. 1.
Apr. 9.
Juna 11.
May 21.
Mar. 20.
Apr. 4.
Jan. 90.
Jan. 90.
Dee. 11.
$7,628,626
a Acts of 1804, Chap. 880. Sect. 1. b Increased May 24, 1802.
c Speoial stock under P. S. Chap. 106, Sect. 42.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
41
Abstract of CertificcUes of Reduction of Capital, by Existing Corporations^
under Public Statutes ^ Chapter 106 y Section 57.
NAME OF OORPOEIATION.
A. W. Clapp Company,
Appl^OQ Bhoe Company, The,
Bay State Shoe and Leather Company,
BofltOD Cordage Company,
Chelsea Cordage Company,
Claflln and Kimball — Incorporated, .
Cobb Stove and Machine Company, .
Driaeoll and Baton Mannfactnring Company,
Evening Oasette Company, The,
F. P. Cox Laundry Company, The, .
Gloucester Ftah Company,
Jarvla Engineering Company,
Lawrence ImproTcment Company,
Mount WaaUngton Glaoa Company, .
Bobinaon Printing Company,
9ewall and Day Cordage Company, .
Standard Cordage Company,
Underhay Oil CO.,
W. M. Colby Company,
Location.
Amount of
Decrease.
Present
Caplul.
When
Filed.
Boston,
Boston,
Worcester,
Boston,
Chelsea,
Boston,
Taunton,
Natiek,
Boston,
Boston,
Bot^ton,
Boston,
Lawrence,
New Bedford,
10 eerUflcatea, 19 corporations,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
$eo,ooo
5,000
800,000
240,000
200,000
85,000
5,000
8,100
120,000
10,000
9,250
50,000
4.500
145,000
5,000
400,000
240,000
25,000
5,000
$2,006,860
$25,000
20,000
100,000
10,000
10,000
50,000
20,000
38,900
80,000
5,000
9,250
50,000
40,500
5,000
20,000
200,000
10,000
25,000
6,000
$671,050
1894.
Aug. 8.
Apr. 13.
Apr. 30.
Apr. 6.
Apr. 6.
Feb. 16.
May 10.
Nov. 27.
Feb. 19.
Mar. 8.
Apr. 16.
Aug. 1.
Apr. 17.
Aug. 6.
Jan. 8.
Apr. 6.
Apr. 6.
Dec. 22.
Apr. 30.
42
ABSTRACT OF CERTIFICATES.
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
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46
CORPORATIONS DISSOLVED.
[1894.
Corporations Dissolved by the Supreme Judicial Courts and Return
thereof made by the Clerks of the Courts of the Several Counties in 1894.
Date of
Decree of
Dissola-
tiOD.
NAMB OF CORPORATION.
Location.
CouDty
where
Diaaolved.
1893.
Deo. 5
1894.
Aug. 7
Oct. S
Mar. 0
June 12
Apr. 10
Apr. 8,
Aug. 8
Apr. 27
Oct. fi
Oct. 2
Mar. 0
Jan. 19
Sept. 24
1893.
Deo. 19
1891.
May 12
Sept. 16
1894.
Apr. 30
Apr. 17
1893.
Dec. 26
1894.
July 8
Apr. 27
Allston Boot and Shoe Company*
Bacon Paper Company, The,
Bay State Paper Box Company,
Boston and Sandwich Glass Company, ....
Boston Macaroni Manufacturing Company,
Burbank-Bwart Company, The
Citizens' Steam and Oaa Light Company of Lynn, The, .
Clark Manufacturing Company,
Department Store Company,
Fanenil Halllnsurance Company
Indian Orchard Mills
Inter-State Collection Company,
Lynn Co-operative Supply Company, The,
Massachusetts Fish Exchange
Metropolitan Cab Company,
North Adams Electric Light and Power Company, .
Orange Power Company
People's Electric Company
Riverside Manufacturing Company
Tabernacle Young Men's Institute
Thomas B. Proctor Leather Company, ....
Waterman and Bee Corporation,
22 corporations.
Boston,
Boston,
Suffolk.
Worcester,
Woroester.
Boston,
Suffolk.
Boston, .
Suffolk.
Worcester,
Worcester.
Lynn, . .
Essex.
Boston,
Suffolk.
Clinton, .
Worcester.
Boston,
Suffolk.
Springfield,
Suffolk.
Boston, .
Suffolk.
Lynn,
Essex.
Boston,
Suffolk.
Boston,
North Adams, .
Berkshire.
Orange,
Franklin.
Hampshire
Fall River.
Bristol.
Boston,
Suffolk.
Boston, .
Suffolk.
Boston, .
Suffolk.
Suffolk.
Suffolk.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 47
Abstract of Acts of Incorporation^ wUh other Enabling Acts^ Amendatory^
Extending^ Revival or Change of Name^ in the Year 1894,
Chapter
239. Acushnet river. Bristol Coanty CommissioDers are authorized to widen the
bridge over said river between the city of New Bedford and the town of
Fairbaven. Chapter 368, Acts of 1893, amended.
530. Acushnet river. Bristol County Commissioners are authorized to widen the
bridge over said river between the city of New Bedford and the town of
Fairbaven. Chapter 368, Acts of 1893, amended.
232. Agawam, town of. May refund a portion of its indebtedness.
79. Altamonte Springs Conopany. Incorporated. May purchase, etc., property at
Altamonte Springs, County of Orange, State of Florida. Capital stock,
$50,000 ; $25,000 of which to be common and $25,000 preferred. May issue
notes and bonds in amount not to exceed whole capital stock.
54. American Antiquarian Society, The. Real and personal estate not to exceed
$500,000.
52. American Baptist Home Mission Society, The. Incorporated. Real and per-
sonal estate not to exceed $3,000,000.
262. American Baptist Missionary Union, The. Real estate not to exceed in value,
$1,000,000. Personal estate not to exceed $2,000,000.
544. American Bell Telephone Company, The. May increase its capital stock,
whole amount not to exceed $50,000,000. Market value of shares to be
determined by the Commissioner of Corporations.
138. American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Term of office of
members of the prudential committee established.
81. American Education Society. Name changed to Congregational Education
Society.
106. Anatolia College, The Trustees of. Incorporated. Real estate.
331. Andover, town of. The Trustees of the Free Schools in the South Parish in
Andover dissolved.
186 Andover, town of. Vote legalized to pay Silas Buck for a horse lost by draw-
ing steam fire engine.
193. Appalachian Mountain Club. Powers enlarged. Real estate to be exempt
from taxation.
494. Arlington, town of. May lay and maintain a water pipe in the^town of Lex-
ington.
48 ACTS OF INCORPORATION, ETC. [1894.
Chapter
244. Athol, town of. May incur indebtedness beyond the debt limit to construct a
system of sewers and sewerage disposal.
61. Attleborough, town of. Water supply. Additional bonds not to exceed
$50,000.
344. Avon, town of. Water loan not to exceed f 70,000.
123. Ayer Library, The. Incorporated. Real and personal estate.
37. Barnstable, county of. Commissioners may construct an earthwork structure
across Wading Plane Creek between the towns of Harwich and Chatham.
365. Barre Water Company. Incorporated. Real estate not to exceed 920,000.
Capital stock not to exceed 940,000. Bonds not to exceed capital stock
actually paid in.
134. Bass river. Times, places and manner of taking fish regulated.
246. Bellingham, Mendon and Hopedale, towns of. May unite to employ a superin-
tendent of schools.
135. Benevolent Fraternity of Churches in the City of Boston. Powers extended to
hold real and personal estate.
411. Benevolent Fraternity of Churches in the City of Boston. Certain powers not
affected.
161. Beverly, city of. Incorporated.
29. Beverly, town of. Water loan. Bonds not to exceed #150,000.
310. Billerica, town of. May incur indebtedness beyond its debt limit for the erec-
tion of a new town hall building. Bonds not to exceed f 30,000.
362. Blackstone Water Company. Incorporated. Real estate not to exceed 920,000.
Capital stock not to exceed 9100,000. Bonds not to exceed capital stock
actually paid in.
521. Boston and Albany Railroad Company, The. May make a location in the town
of Wellesley.
165. Boston and Chelsea, cities of. May build and maintain a public highway
bridge across Chelsea creek.
550 Boston and Lowell Bicycle Railway Company. Incorporated. Capital stoc;k
not to exceed $3,000,000. Bonds not to exceed amount of capital stock actu-
ally paid in. Issue of stock and bonds to be approved by Railroad Commis-
sioners. May increase capital stock subject to general laws. May mort-
gage its franchises and property. Railway to be operated by electricity,
467. Boston and Providence Railroad. Amendment to an act relating to tlie aboli-
tion of certain grade crossings on said railroad.
108. Boston, city of. Agreement with town of Southborough relating to the build-
ing of a water basin in said town, ratified and confirmed.
242. Boston, city of, and town of Brookline. Boundary line established.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 49
Chapter
485. Boston, city of, and town of Brookline. Boundary line established. Chapter
242, Acts of 1894, amended.
256. Boston, city of. Apportionment of assessments for the construction of sewers.
119. Boston, city of. Board of Health may pave private passageways, when public
health requires.
266. Boston, city of. Board of Police empowered to expend an additional sum of
money tor legal assistance.
335. Boston, city of. Board of Survey to continue in oflSce.
157. Boston, city of. Board of Water Commissioners may release certain land in
Marlborough to the former owner.
443. Boston, city of. Construction and repair of buildings. Amended.
257. Boston, city of. Erection or alteration of buildings in violation of law may be
restrained.
416. Boston, city of. Extension of Huntington and Columbus avenues.
227. Boston, city of. Interest on sewer assessments.
82. Boston, city of. May abate a portion of certain assessments for construction
of sidewalks.
217. Boston, city of. May constmct and maintain a bridge connecting the city
proper, so called, with Charlestown
396. Boston, city of. May incur indebtedness beyond its debt limit for park pur-
poses.
454. Boston, city of. Office of Commissioner of Wires established.
276. Boston, city of. Relating to appointment of assistant assessors.
548. Boston Elevated Railway Company. Incorporated. Capital stock to be not less
than 910,000,000, but may be increased not to exceed $20,000,000 in all.
Bonds not to exceed amount of capital stock actually paid in. May mort-
gage its franchise and property.
548. Boston Transit Commission. Established for five years from July 2, 1894. To
construct subways for railway tracks and for the running of railway cars
thereon. Tunnel to East Boston. Shall construct a bridge over Charles
river between the present Charles river bridge and the Fitch bur^ railroad
bridge Rapid Transit Loan by city of Boston. Strips of land may be
taken for purposes of an elevated railway, etc.
189. Boston Harbor and other waters. Use of net, seine, etc , for catching smelts
prohibited.
13. Boston Home for A^ed and Infirm Hebrews and Orphanage. Name changed
to The Leopold Morse Home for Infirm Hebrews and Orphanage.
4^3. Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn Railroad. Part of its location may be taken
by The Metropolitan Park Commission for park purposes. Said railroad
may take new location in accordance with law.
50 ACTS OF INCORPORATION, ETC. [1894.
Chapter
464. Braintree Street Railway Companj. May extend its tracks into the town of
Holbrook. May purchase all the rights, franchise and property of the
Randolph Street Railway Company. May increase capital stock, whole
amount not to exceed 9200,000. Bonds not to exceed amount of capital
stock actually paid in. May change its name to Braintree, Randolph and
Holbrook Street Railway Company, or other appropriate name.
84. Bristol, county of. County commissioners may borrow not exceeding f 160,000
to complete new Court House at Taunton.
226. Brockton, city of. Certain land ma^ be taken for the alteration of grade
crossings of the Old Colony division of the New York, New Haven and
Hartfora Railroad Company in said city.
95. Brockton, city of. City engineer to be, ex officio, Clerk of the Board of Com-
missioners of Sewerage construction.
213. Brockton, city of. May lay out and construct a street through a portion of the
Thompson Burial Ground.
93. Brockton, city of. Part of the town of West Bridgewater to be annexed to
said city.
42. Brockton, city of. Water loan. Bonds not to exceed f 720,000.
516. Brockton Street Railway Company. May purchase or lease the property,
rights, capital stock and franchises of the Brockton and Holbrook Street
Railway Company, the Brockton and Stoughton Street Railway Company,
the Brockton and Bridgewater Street Railway Company, the Brockton and
East Bridgewater Street Railway Company, the East Side Street Railway
Company, the Whitman Street Railway Company, and the Bridgewater
and East Bridgewater Street Railway Company, and said street railways
are authorized to lease or sell, convey and assign their franchises and
property, etc , to said Brockton Street Railway Company. May increase its
capital stock not to exceed 9750,000. Bonds not to exceed f 750,000.
518. Brookline Gas Light Company. May increase its capital stock, whole amount
not to exceed 92,000,000.
278. Brookline, town of. Time extended for payment of certain debts.
89. Cambridge, city of. Additional park loan.
85. Cambridge, city of. Additional water loan not to exceed 91*000,000.
212. Cambridge, city of. May incur indebtedness for construction of streets and for
similar purposes.
520. Cambridge, citv of. May take additional land for the better preservation of
the purity of the waters in Fresh Pond.
360. Cambridge, city of. Middlesex county commissioners are directed to erect a
new registry of deeds building for southern Middlesex district.
116. Cambridge, city of. Public parks. Acts 1893, chapter 337, section 4, amended.
255. Cambridge, city of. Taking of water from storage basin at Roberts^ mills on
Stony Brook.
35. Canton, town of. Water loan. Bonds not to exceed 9190,000.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 51
Chapter
295. Cape Cod Bay Land Association. May build and maintain a bridge in South
Wellfleet. Chapter 132, Acts of 1893, amended.
468. Cape Cod South Side Railroad Company. Incorporated. Capital stock,
$10,000, with privilege to increase to an amount not to exceed $100,000.
Bonds not to exceed at any time $15,000 per mile for each mile of road
actually constructed and ready for operation.
159. Channing Conference, The, Taunton. Incorporated. Real and personal estate,
$100,000. May hold meetings without the Commonwealth.
325. Chelsea, city of. Charter revised.
14. Chelsea, city of. May issue new bonds.
178. Chester, town of. Fire district may be established.
179. Chester, town of. Fire district water supply. Water loan not to exceed $30,000.
486. Chesterfield, town of. Proceedings of town meeting of July 22, 1893, legalized
and confirmed.
208. Chicopee, city of. May incur indebtedness beyond the limit fixed by law for
constructing bridge between Holyoke and that part of Chicopee known as
Willimansett.
167. Children's Hospital in Boston, The. Real and personal estate not to exceed
$1,000,000.
438. College Settlements Association. Incorporation under general laws ratified
and confirmed. Electoral board, membership, etc.
109. Connecticut river. Time extended in which Watson Whittlesey and his heirs
and assigns may build and maintain a bridge across said river, from the
city of Ilolyoke to the city of Chicopee.
252. Conway Electric Street Railway Company. Incorporated. Capital stock
not to exceed $50,000. Bonds not to exceed $25,000. May carry on the
business of a common carrier of goods and merchandise.
87. Court Colombia, Number six thousand and twelve. Ancient Order of Foresters.
Name changed to Court Columbia, Number six thousand and twelve.
Ancient Order of Foresters of America.
88. Court Montgomery, Number six thousand three hundred eighty-six. Ancient
Order of Foresters. Name changed to Court Montgomery, Number six
thousand three hundred eighty-six, Ancient Order of Foresters of America.
488. Cummington, town of. Proceedings of town meeting of June 10, 1893,
legalized and confirmed.
148. Cushman Library, in Bemardston. Library commissioners may purchase
books therefor.
358. Dartmouth, town of. Henry M. Plummer and others are authorized to build
and maintain a bridge over Little river in said town.
282. Deerfield, town of. May refund a portion of its indebtedness.
265. Dorchester Savings Bank. Incorporated.
52 ACTS OF INCORPORATION, ETC. [1894.
Chapter
449. Drawbaugh Telephone and Telegraph Company. May or^nize under chapter
106 of the Public Statutes, a corporation for the manu^cture of telephones,
etc. Capital stock to be not less than 91*000,000 nor more than 910,000,000.
31. Dwigbt Manufacturing Company. May increase its capital stock not to exceed
f 1,800,000. May engage in business in any part of the United States of
America.
418. East Longmeadow, town of. Incorporated.
75. East Parish of the town of Salisbury. May sell or lease its lands. Division
of town into two parishes not to be affected.
65. Eastern Middlesex, First District Court of. Office of assistant clerk established.
125. Essex, county of. County Commissioners may construct fenders about the
piers of Haverhill bridge, between the city of Haverhill and the town of
Bradford.
234. Everett, city of. May incur indebtedness beyond the debt limit for park and
library purposes, etc.
96. Everett, city of. Relative to annual reports of certain officers and boards to
the mayor.
478. Fall River, city of, and town of Westport. Boundary line to be located and
defined.
351. Fall River, city of. Board of Police established.
540. Fall River, city of. Board of Police established. Chapter 351, Acts of 1894,
amended.
233. Fall River, city of. Renewal of water loan.
400. Falmouth Heights Water Company. Incorporated. Real estate not to exceed
93,000. Capital sU "
stock actually paid
93,000. Capital stock not to exceed 95,000. Bonds not to exceed capital
llv paid in.
69. Falmouth, town of, or County Commissioners of Barnstable County. May
build and maintain a bridge over the creek running into West Falmouth.
264. Federation of Loyal Knights and Ladies. Name changed to Royal Crescent
441. Fire District of the town of Dal ton. Additional water loan not to exceed
910,000.
150. First Congregational Church of Nantucket Title to certain real estate to vest
in said church, as soon as incorporated under chapter 404, Acts of 1887, and
acts in amendment thereof and in addition thereto.
513. First Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Gloucester, Trustees of the.
Trustees and organization confirmed. Trustees to receive and hold real
estate, etc. Name changed to The Trustees of the Pi'ospect Street Methodist
Episcopal Church of Gloucester.
53. Fitchburg Railroad Company. May unite and consolidate with the Brookline
and Pepperell Railroad Company, the Brookline Railroad Company, and
the Brookline and Milford Railroad Company under the name of the
Fitchburg Railroad Company,
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 53
Chapter
339, Foxboroufi^h Water Supply District. Limits extended. May increase issue
of bonds.
456. Globe Mutual Boiler Insurance Company of Boston. Incorporated. Not to
issue policies until the sum of f 2oO,000 has been subscribed to be insured,
and entered upon the books of the corporation.
115. Granite Trust Company. Name changed to Puritan Trust Company.
215. Greenfield, town of. Fire District Number One may increase its water supply.
Fire District water loan not to exceed 960,000.
57. Harrison Square Church. Name changed to Christ Church of Dorchester.
296. Hayerhill, city of. Fishing in Crystal lake restricted.
480. Hayerhill, city of. Relating to police department.
243. Hayerhill, Georgetown and Danyers Street Railway Company. Time for con-
struction extended.
43. Hillside Agricultural Society. Real and personal estate not to exceed 910,000.
286. Holyoke, city of. Ma^ incur indebtedness beyond its debt limit to pay its part
of the cost of building Willimansett bridge.
122. Holyoke Street Railway Company. May construct and operate its railway
over certain private property.
404. Ipswich, town of. Additional water loan not to exceed 930,000.
313. Ipswich, town of. County Commissioners of Essex county may pay a portion
of the expense of rebuilding Green Street bridge in said town.
390. Ipswich, town of. Proceedings of town meeting legalized.
420. Lawrence, city of. Election and term of office of the Overseers of the Poor.
86. Lawrence, city of. May refund a portion of its debt.
408. Lee Congregational Society. May change and re-establish the valuation of its
pews.
254. Lexington Print Works, The. May increase its capital stock, whole amount
not to exceed 9130,000.
223. Lexington Water Company. May increase its capital stock, whole amount
not to exceed 990,000. Additional bonds, 910,000, whole amount authorized
not to exceed f70,000.
445. Lincoln, town of. May refund portions of its water debt.
278. Lowell and Suburban Street Railway Company. May extend its tracks.
May supply electricity for motive power for street railway purposes.
190. Lowell, city of. Board of Overseers of the Poor to be elected by the people
instead of by the City Council.
141. L'union des Ouvriers. Name changed to L^union St. Joseph.
54 ACTS OF INCORPORATION, ETC. [1894.
Chapter
617. Lynn and Boston Railroad Company. May lease the property, rights, capital
stock and franchise of the Boston and Revere Electric Street Railway Com-
pany and increase its capital stock not to exceed $3,000,000 over that now
authorized by its charter. May issue mortgage bonds.
247. Lynn, city of. Charter revised.
302. Lynn, city of. Nuisance occasioned by the dam of the Butman mill on Little
river to be abated.
20L Maiden, city of. Sewerage loan not to exceed |oOO,000.
37 L Maiden, Melrose and Stoneham Street Railway Company. May extend its
road into the cities of Medford and Somerville.
340. Marlborough, city of. Additional water loan not to exceed $35,000.
99. Marlborough, city of. May incur indebtedness beyond limit fixed by law, to
construct a system of sewerage and sewage disposal.
403. Marlborough, city of. Water loan of 1894 not to exceed $35,000.
172. Mash pee and Barnstable, towns of. Boundary line established.
55. Massachusetts Historical Society, The. Real and personal estate not to exceed
$600,000.
28. Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company, The. Exempted from making
returns to the Insurance Commissioner.
376. Massachusetts State Firemen^s Association. Treasurer to give bond in the
sum of $10,000.
269. Medford, city of. Grade for cellars may be established and grade of certain
lands may be ordered to be raised.
162. Medford, city of. May clear of obstructions, improve, etc., the brooks and
streams within said city.
163. Medford, city of. May increase and improve its water supply.
323. Melrose, town of. System of sewerage bonds not to exceed $100,000.
417. Mendon, town of. Water supply. Water loan not to exceed $15,000.
113. Merrimac river. Protection of salmon fry at entrance of canals in Lowell and
Lawrence.
194. Methuen, town of. Water loan.
527. Middlesex, county of. Additional judge of probate and insolvency to be
appointed.
66. Middlesex, county of. Couhty Commissioners may erect an addition to the
registry of deeds building in Cambridge.
507. Millbury, town of. May alter, straighten and deepen the channel of Black-
stone river in said town between upper and lower railroad bridges.
290. Monson, town of. Water supply. Water loan not to exceed $65,000.
90. Mount Holyoke College, The Trustees of. Real and personal estate not to
exceed $2,0C0,0O0.
319. Nantucket Railroad Company. May change the present location of its road.
459. Natick, town of. May take lands for sewerage purposes.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 55
Chapter
447. New Bedford, city of. May accept grant from the United States for park
purposes.
345. New Bedford, city of. May increase its water supply. Bonds not to exceed
♦1.200.000.
171. New Bedford, city of. May refund a portion of its water debt.
149. Newbury, town of. Allowance to be made by the Commissioners of Essex
county for rebuilding Thurlow's bridge over the Parker river in said town.
76. Newbuijport, city of. May discontinue certain common landing places on the
Memmac river in said city.
474. Newburyport Water Company. City of Ncwburyport may purchase all the
property of said company. Water loan by said town.
463. New England and New York Railroad Company. Incorporated. Capital
stock not to exceed the present authorized capital stock of the New York
and New England Railroad Company. May issue bonds.
77. New England Burglary Insurance Company, Boston. Incorporated. Capital
stock, 1200,000, which may be increased not to exceed S500,000.
152. Newton Centre Trust Company. Incorporated.
210. Newton, city of. May incur indebtedness for construction of streets and for
similar purposes.
495. Newton, city of. May incur indebtedness not to exceed $750,000 beyond debt
limit for sewer pui'poses
72. Newton Theological Institution, The. Whole amount of property not to
exceed |1,200,000, of which not more than f 400,000 shall be in real estate.
155. Newton Theological Institution, The. May confer degrees.
168. Newton ville Trust Company. Incorporated.
466. New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company. Relative to raising
the grade and changing the location of the Proviaence division of said com-
pany in the city of Boston.
15. Norfolk, county of. County Commissioners may borrow money to complete
the Court House in Dedham.
524. North Adams, town of. May refund its indebtedness.
177. Northampton, citv of. Additional water supply. Water loan of 1894 not to
exeeed $100,000.
44. Norwood, town of. Water loan. Additional bonds not to exceed $20,000.
156. Old Colony Railroad Company. Chapter 351, Acts of 1887, to be void unless
certain conditions are complied with.
338. Old Colony Railroad Company. May take land for terminal facilities in the
city of Boston. May increase its capital stock not to exceed in all $3,000,000.
(Section 3, chapter 127, Acts of 1893, amended.)
392. Old Colony Railroad Company. To provide and operate a suitable ferry
between city of New Bedford and town of Fairhaven. Penalty for delay.
361. Orleans, Brewster and Harwich, towns of. May unite for the employment of
a superintendent of schools.
107. Orleans, town of. Preservation and taking of alewives in Sparrow's pond.
56 ACTS OF INCORPORATION, ETC. [1894.
Chapter
202. People's Building Asaociation, The. Extension of time of incorporation.
Capital stock not to exceed 1200,000.
482. Pepperell, town of. May refund its indebtedness.
100. Perley Free School, Trustees of the, (Jeorgetown. Incorporated. Real and
personal estate, devised and bequeathed by will of John Perle}', and an
amount in addition not to exceed $300,000. Trust funds.
91. Pittsfield, city of. Additional water supply.
487. Plainfield, town of. Proceedings of town meeting of March 6, 1893, and the
several adjournments thereof, legalized and confirmed.
347. Providence, Ponagansett and Springfield Railroad Company. Time for con-
struction extended.
222. Provincetown, town of. Proceedings at annual town meeting confirmed.
191. Revere Water Company. Real estate not to exceed in value |60|000. Capital
stock not to exceed $125,000.
78. Rockport, town of. Water supply. Water loan not to exceed $150,000.
74. Roslindale Methodist Episcopal Church in Boston. Name changed to the
Bethany Methodist Episcopal Church in Boston.
94. Rufus S. Frost General Hospital, Chelsea. Incorporated. Real and personal
estate not to exceed $100,000. Chelsea Day Nurserv, Children's Home and
(leneral Hospital. Name changed to Chelsea Day ^Nursery and Children's
Home. This act repealed by chapter 185, Acts of 1894.
185. RufuS S. Frost General Hospital, Chelsea Incorporated. Real and personal
estate not to exceed 1100,000 Chelsea Day Nursery, Children's Home and
General Hospital. Name changed to Chelsea Day Nursery and Children's
Home. Chapter 94, Acts of 1894, repealed.
80. Rutland, town of. May refund its debt.
70. Sanford Hall, Trustees of, Medway Village. Incorporated. Real and per-
sonal property not to exceed $40,000.
241. Sharon, town of. Water supply. May purchase franchise, etc., of the Sharon
Water Company. Water loan not to exceed $50,000.
166. Society for the Collegiate Instruction of Women. Name changed to Radcliflfe
College. Real and personal estate not to exceed $2,OoO,0(X). May confer
degrees on women subject to approval of the President and Fellows of
Harvard College.
369. South Deerfield Water Company. Incorporated. Real estate not to exceed
$20,000. Capital stock not to exceed $50,000. Bonds not to exceed capital
stock actually paid in.
277. South Hadley, town of. May use sinking fund for the payment of the loan to
Fire District Number One of the town of South Hadley.
289, Southbridge Water Supply Company. May take the waters of Hatchet
brook. Real and personal estate not to exceed $100,000. Whole capital
stock not to exceed $100,000, of $.50 par value.
73. St. John's Chm-ch, in Northampton, Minister, Wardens, Vestry and Proprietors
of. The. Real and personal estate not to exceed $300,000.
444. State Fire Marshal. Office established.
306. Stickney Fund, Trustees of the, Plymouth. Incorporated.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 57
Chapter
18. Stone Institute, Newton. Incorporated. Real and personal estate not to
exceed $100,000.
•
187. Stoneham and Wakefield, towns of. May purchase rights, property, etc., of
the Wakefield Water Company. Water loan not to exceed $60,000 beyond
the amount to be paid to said company.
346. Stoughton, town of. Additional water loan not to exceed $125,000.
240. Swampscott, town of. May expend money for watering its streets.
192. Trustees of the Museum of Fine Arts, The. Name changed to Museum of (Mne
Arts. Additional real and personal estate not to exceed f 2,000,0u0.
512. Wakefield and Stoneham Street Railway Company. May purchase or lease
any street railway now or hereafter having a location or operating in any
city or town in which said Wakefield and Stoneham Street Railway Com-
pany may now or hereafter operate its railway ; or may lease or sell its
railway property or franchises to any street railway company now or here-
after having a location in any city or town in which said Wakefield and
Stoneham street Railway Company may operate its railway or have a
location or with which said railway may be connected.
154. Waltham, city of. System of sewers may be adopted. Tax assessment for
expense ox construction.
140. Wareham and Plymouth, towns of. Authorized to contribute to the main-
tenance of the alewife fishery of the Half Way pond and the Agawam river.
124. Wareham, town of. The Tremont Nail Company may make improvements for
the introduction and taking of alewives, salmon and shad in the Parker
Mills pond and the Tihonet pond.
523. Warren, town of. Pi*oceedings of annual town meeting of April 2 and 9,
1894, confirmed.
45. Wellesley, town of. May lease the right to attach electric wires to poles
owned by said town.
158. Wendell Phillips Hall Association. Name changed to Wendell Phillips
Memorial Association.
386. Winchendon, town of. Water supply. Water loan not to exceed $150,000.
71. Winchester, town of. Election and term of office of Board of Sewer Com-
missioners.
92. Winchester, town of. Sewerage loan not to exceed $100,000.
395. Woodlawn Cemetery. May purchase its capital stock for cancellation. Not
to have a capital stock auer said cancellation. Land to be conveyed to the
city of Everett for park purposes.
434. Worcester and Mill bury Street Railway Company. May extend its railway
into the towns of Sutton, Grafton and Northbridge. May increase capital
stock and issue mortgage bonds
293. Worcester, city of. May incur indebtedness beyond its debt limit to erect a
city hall.
64. Worcester Homoeopathic Dispensary Association, The. Name changed to the
Worcester Homoeopathic Hospital and Dispensary Association. May hold
property not to exceed $500,000.
58
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition of GorporationSj
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
A. B. Noyes & Co. Cor-
porfttion,
A. C. FalrbaDki Com-
pany, The, .
A. F. BemU Hat Oom-
pany, ....
A. F. Towle & Son Com-
pany, ....
A. Jus Johnson Com-
pany, . . . .
A. M. Gardner Hard-
ware Company, .
A. M. McPhail Piano
Company, .
A. M. Richards Build-
ing Movinff Company,
A. 8. Lowell Company,
A. 8. Rogers Shoe Com-
pany, ....
A. Storrs and Bement
Company, .
A. T. Stearns Lumber
Company, The, .
A. W. Clapp Company,
A. W. Eaton Paper
Company, .
Abbott Slipper Com-
pany, The (for 1898),.
Abbott Slipper Com-
pany, The, .
Abbott's Menthol Plas-
ter Company,
Abington Tack and Ma-
chine Association,
Abraro FrenchCompany,
Acushnet Co-operative
Association,
Acushnet Mills Corpora-
tion, . . . .
Adams & Odell Incorpo-
rated, . . . .
1894.
Fob. 12,
1893.
Dec. 6,
Sept. 12,
1894.
Aug. 7,
Aug. 11,
Aug. 2,
Aug. 26,
July 26,
Mar. 9,
Feb. 17,
June 15,
Feb. 26,
Apr. 6,
Jan. 16,
Feb. 5,
Jan. 1,
Feb. 15,
Feb. 5,
Mar. 28,
Jan. 8,
Sept. 4,
Aug. 6,
Mar. 19,
Feb. 6,
Oct. 6,
July 25,
May 1,
6 Mar. 21,
Jan. 20,
1893.
Mar. 13,
Nov. 17.
1894.
May 10,
June 20,
May 15,
June 13,
May 7,
May 8,
Mar. 27,
May 28,
May 18,
Nov. 19,
Nov. 15,
June 20,
Apr. 11,
35
$20,000
15,000
30,000
150,000
15,000
50,000
100,000
8,000
35.000 ;
5,000
80,000
150,000
25,000
7,600
7,500
35,000
15,000
400,000
7,600
500,000
10,000
5
i3
$8,000
35,000
4,000
42,547
101,804
ABBBT8.
^
o
•a ^
So
•o ».
a 9
a
1
With
$1,500
R. B.
$2,500
7,296
4,000
94,006
a $3,162
1,199
40,000
100
1,000
7,227
2,847
3,000
605
10.000
5
$16,936
3,526
6.360
66,206
725
33,906
87,S3V
900
2,283
2,200
124,248
162,151
34,152
9.277
8,116
3,281
6,00(1
447,R51
- I 4,06S
258,696 77,856
*
1,060
a And tools.
b AcUonmed.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
59
required by Chapter 106^ Section 54^ of the Public Statutes,
•T.IOO
9,488
47,301
100,600
27,4W
00,147
47,917
2,800
0(^897
150^457
0,191
3,810
t,084
1,040
4,000
417,297
&»ias
IM^W
U,fiOt
ASSKTB— >COD.
5
•
•
1
§
(US
"-So
S
8^
a
1
II
s
A.
a
OQ
a $3,000
$20,000
3,000
098
2,000
11,600
62,1M>
3,509
$11,266
e 1,200
10,167
4,000
526
<f80S
2,480
1,598
1,703
2.075
h.'
,654
o
$30,198
28,479
53,551
243,872
29,177
96,155
149.272
4,698
36,447
10,000
215,145
358.882
41,543
Liabilities.
QQ
3
15,040
16,199
37.154
24.600
866,148
13,215
596,166
17,024
$20,000
15,000
30,000
150,000
15,000
60,000
100,000
3,000
36,000
5,000
30,000
160,000
26,000
$10,078
13,479
15,690
63,491
14,177
39,280
49,272
1,698
1,447
5,000
161,335
60,163
15,879
7,500
7.500
35,000
15,000
400,000
6,875
500,000
10,000
7,817
8.699
2,154
9,600
456,037
127
t
7,624
o
S'
•a «
«
Q .
Ki a
o o
~ P.
&
$120
30.381
23,810
149,229
664
023
10,111
3,213
86,673
$7,852
6,876
3,000
10,403
$30,198
28,479
53,551
243,872
29,177
96,155
149,272
4,698
36,457
10,000
215,145
358,382
41,543
15,940
16,199
37,154
24,600
865,148
13,215
596,166
17,624
5 Toola, etc.
c Fixtures.
d Furniture and fixtures.
60
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
OS
^
^
t»
3
So
o
Q
Adams Brothers Maoa-
factaring Company, .
Adams Gas Light Com-
pany, ....
Adelphi Rink Corpora-
lion, ....
Advertiser Newspaper
Company, .
yRtna KnlttlngCoropany,
^Ctna Mills, .
Agawam Company,
Agawam Farm Com-
pany
Agawam Manufacturing
Company, .
Agawam Paper Com-
pany
Albertson Marble Com-
pany, The, .
Albion Paper Company,
Allen and Bndicott
Building Company,
The, .
Alien Fan Company,
Allen Gymnasium Com
pany, The, .
A merican BedsteadCom
pany. The, .
American Bell Tele
phone Company,
American BoltCompany,
American Casket Hard-
ware Company, The, .
American Cigar Com-
pany
American Citizen Com-
pany
American Collection
Agency,
American Dry Plate
Company, The, .
1894.
Feb. 2,
1894.
Jan. 22,
Sept. 25,
Aug. 11,
June 21,
June 4,
June 14,
Apr. 18,
May 10,
a May 8,
Apr. 16,
Mar. 14,
Jan. 4,
1893.
Dec. 18,
Aug. 16,
1894.
July 11,
Mar. 6,
Jan. 81,
Mar. 2,
Jan. 26,
May 10,
May 1,
July 2,
May 17,
Jan. 30,
Jan. 5,
Dee. 12,
Aug. 8,
Mar. 12,
Jan. 17,
Mar. 27,
a Mar. 3,
Apr. 27,
Mar. 27,
Feb. 26,
Jan. 9,
Feb. 19,
Jan. 10,
Jan. 12,
Jan. 4,
Mar. 21,
Mar. 5,
June 7,
June 5,
May 28,
May 14,
3 "
Is
- o
3a
3'
$40,000
17,800
5,fi00
30,000
7,fi00
200,000
36,000
6,000
200,000
400,000
120,000
60,000
230,000
20,000
52,000
10,000
20,000,000
200,000
20,000
75,000
5,000
1,000
20,000
ASBKTfl.
Real BsUte.
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
1
O
Machinery.
Cash and Debts
Receivable.
$67,500
with
real
estate
$19,438
23,077
with
R.B.
$8,777
6,109
-
-
$4,600
-
44
-
-
-
9,000
319,882
-
-
-
6,700
1,635
95,000
$35,000
60,000
65,000
82,137
22,000
3,000
19,000
14,000
16,977
3,600
3,400
200
900
63
30,000
with
B.E.
26,000
62,219
874,445 j
6360,000
0 24,446
with
LAW.P.
179,670
126,180
with
real
esUte
21,147
206,000
60,000
146,000
182,000
97,123
205,554
with
B.B.
-
41,8X0
-
-
-
8,000
2,940
-
-
67,773
-
2.666
-
-
-
6,600
3,074
950,984
-
-
6,924
6,416,732
120,044
d 60,195
0 09,849
60,030
18,004
-
-
/ 6,678
7,398
9,600
3,500
6.000
6,200
33,284
-
-
-
-
6.583
-
-
-
-
1,000
-
-
-
2,618
6,143
a Adjourned.
c Dwellings and real estate.
« And land.
b And two mills, buildings and maefalaary.
d Water power.
/ Tools, etc.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
61
of Corporations — Continaed.
A88ST8— Con.
LL4BILITIB8.
s « *•
2*20
•
3
M
M
s
a
5
•
m
1
1
s
Balance Profit
and LoM.
•
3
Capital Stock.
•
3
.o
&
•
1
Balance Profit
ana Lose.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
1
$10,632
-
-
-
$97,570
$40,000
$26,600
-
$31,070
$97,570
410
-
$553
-
30,026
17,300
44
-
19,582
36,026
-
-
-
$1,596
6,240
5,500
740
1
-
-
_
6,240
-
-
-
34,505
363,427
30.000
883,427
-
-
-
863,427
17,025
«
261
3.801
29,812
7,500
21,812
-
—V
-
29,812
in,7M
-
-
-
353,981
250,000
94,707
-
9,224
-
858,931
27,402
-
1,530
-
80,909
36,000
24,047
-
-
$20,862
80.900
-
-
-
6.847
10,800
5,000
5,800
-
-
-
10,800
114,702
-
-
115,718
337,699
200,000
137,699
-
-
-
387,609
125,931
-
-
-
680,046
400.000
197,045
-
83,001
680,046
82,118
-
-
-
178,445
120,000
23,874
-
31,551
a 3,020
178,445
121,247
-
-
-
606,370
• 60.000
221,172
-
325,198
-
606,870
-
-
-
-
246,924
230,000
-
>
16,924
-
246,024
6.100
-
-
6,085
23,125
20.000
3,125
-
-
-
28,126
-
-
4,786
-
75,125
52,000
22,074
-
-
1,051
75,125
8,808
-
600
083
14,950
9,000
5,050
-
-
-
14,050
1.272,570
-
37/)0M31
-
45,712,341
20,000/)00
3,550,596
$
22,161,745
-
-
45,712,841
33,587
-
2,206
2,910
286.830
200,000
36,880
-
-
-
286,830
5,074
-
-
1,159
20,204
19,400
804
-
-
-
20,204
86,648
-
552
-
136,184
75,000
59,184
-
-
2,000
186,184
-
-
10.746
-
16,329
5,000
2,976
-
6,720
1,688
16,829
-
-
^
-
1,000
1,000
-
-
-
-
1,000
0,5«7
-
-
5,224
28,552
20,000
8,562
-
-
-
28,552
a On improvementa.
62
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Ck)NDrnoN
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
a
>
•
ti
g
3
«3
33
t3
9
)^
"ii
•4
o
^S
1
^
2
* o
M P*
S3
American Fire Hose
Manufacturing Com-
panyi . . . .
American Linen Com-
pany, . . . .
American Mica Com-
pany, ....
American Net and Twine
Company, .
American Optical Com-
pany, ....
American Powder Mills,
The, . . . .
American Press Associ-
ation of Massachusetts
(for 1803). .
American Press Associ-
ation of Massachusetts,
American Printing Com-
pany, The, .
American Publishing
Company, The, .
American Rubber Com-
pany, . . . .
American Steam Gauge
Company, .
American Telephone and
Telegraph Company of
Massachusetts, .
American Tube Works,
American Walt ham
Watch Company,
American Whip Com-
pany, ....
Ames Manufacturing
Company, .
Ames Plow Company, .
Ames Sword Company,
Amesburyand Salisbury
Gas Company, .
Amesbury Building Cor-
poration, The, .
1804.
Mar. 16,
1804.
Jan. 0,
Nov. 10,
Nov. 7,
Not. 0,
a
Dec. 20,
Doc. 8,
Feb. 21,
Jan. 1,
Nov. 16,
Nov. 14,
Jan. 8,
6 Jan. 8,
Dec. 4,
Nov. 6,
Oct. 20,
dOct. 10.
Aug. 16,
Jan. 0,
July 26,
May 81,
June 15,
Jan. 23,
June 20,
d May 20,
Mar. 23,
Mar. 6,
May 26,
Mar. 20,
Jan. 24,
1898.
Deo. 27,
Oct. 8.
1804.
Oct. 2,
Mar. 6,
Mar. 1,
Feb. 10,
Jan. 16,
Deo. 3,
efOct. 8,
July 2,
/Jan. 2,
$100,000
800,000
100,000
350,000
60,000
300,000
20,000
20,000
760,000
20,000
1,000,000
60,000
10,000
300,000
3,000,000
AB8BTB.
600,000
200,000
160,000
60,000
30.000
I
I
fl
^.•
So
•
•
*£
a
a
"O u
2
J9
a 9
S3
»
2"
<g
$360,600
60,000
100,780
84,106
653,812
182,287
140,000
666,304
08,600
62,000
4,876
5
9 9
-I
-
-
$21,600
$151,777
$208,018
606.400
-
-
1,600
-
-
60,000
86,000
74,780
71,075
with
R. E.
46,000
-
-
2,000
-
-
6,640
with
R.B.
-
-
-
6,000
37,287
146,000
126,000
-
-
16,660
with
real
ectate
with
R.S.
010,887
with
R.E.
137,611
-
-
47,600
with
R.B.
37,790
-
-
40,266
-
62,060
-
•5,749
5,421
27,874
166,806
848,40S
202,649
e 16,000 I
16,165 {
13,786
2,061,742
4,868
511.121
20,185
800
472,822
200«401
12,302
40,036
62,604
3.817
2,646
a No meeting held; report of Jan. 1, 1804. b Special, In place of annual.
c Notes receivable. d Adjourned.
e Assets of the Company sold and proceeds distributed to the stockholders by vote.
/ Should have been held.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
63
of Corporations — Continued.
A88BT8~Oon.
Liabilities.
•
•a
s
a
•
•
1
1
Balance Profit
and Lobs.
•
1
GQ
1
o
•
s
Reserves.
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
1
$W.7OT
>
-
.
$43,046
1
1
$100,000
$13,914
-
.
-
$113,914
97,668
-
-
-
960,169
800,000
104,152
-
$65,017
-
969,169
24,a20
-
$103,818
-
157,312
100.000
23,855
-
33.467
-
157,312
229,730
-
-
-
486,632
350,000
133.160
-
2,472
-
485,632
384,315
-
32,293
-
945,956
60,000
2.500
-
683,456
$200,000
945,956
56,947
-
76,782
-
554.483
300,000
48.717
-
107.728
98.038
564.483
1,093
-
-
$10,186
46,334
20,000
26.334
-
-
-
46,334
-
-
5,266
503
25,104
20,000
5,104
-
-
-
25,104
922.728
-
a 1,000,000
-
4,638,282
750,000
2,582.571
-
1.305.711
-
4,638,282
1.500
-
20,000
6,199
37,552
20,000
17,552
-
-
-
37,552
1.008,927
-
8,625
-
1,880,960
1,000,000
257.746
-
843,668
220,546
1,830,960
31,942
♦1,400
-
-
79,177
50,000
6.745
-
-
22,482
79.177
~
•.
69,700
-
10,000
10,000
>
-
-
-
10,000
whh
caah
and debts
-
612,822
800,000
181,461
-
100,491
30,870
612,822
8,061,350
-
89,156
-
4,827,098
3,000,000
752,060
-
1,075,029
-
4,827,008
67,078
.
9,200
176,314
500,000
500,000
^
^
^^
^
500,000
142.300
-
-
-
230,736
200.000
4,053
-
25,783
-
230,786
67,212
-
-
-
209.636
150.000
59,539
-
97
-
209,636
19,007
-
-
68,646
60,000
-
8,640
-
68,646
-
-
-
-
64,696
30,000
30,000
-
4,606
-
64,006
a Fall River Iron Works stock.
b Plant, — Lines in Mass.
64
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of CEuriKicATEa of Condition
•
When Certificate was
Filed.
Date of Meeting.
Capital Stock as fixed
by the Corporation.
•
9
a
A
$89,683
with
Assm.
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Buildings.
Machinery.
Cash and Debts
Receivable.
Ameabury Electric
Light, Heat & Power
Company, .
1894.
Aug. 11,
1894.
July 16,
$60,000
R.E.
$11,879
$3,348
Amherst Co-operative
Creamery A ssodation ,
The, ....
•
Oct. 3,
Oct. 1,
3,700
6,200
$2,000
$8,200
1,000
498
Amherst Water Com.
p«ny
May 2,
May 1.
40,000
-
4,875
-
a 82,479
8,895
Andover Electric Com-
pany, The, .
Not. 28,
Oct. 22,
30,000
12,898
with
R.B.
i 30,037
1 b 16.364
1,642
Andover Press (Limited) ,
The
May 26,
Apr. 9,
6,000
-
-
-
6,523
2,775
Angler Chemical Com-
pany, The, .
Mar. 6,
Mar. 5,
1
10,000
-
-
-
300
18,467
Annawan Manufactory,
Sept. 8,
Aug. 7,
160,000
41,600
28,500
18,000
49,700
634
Appleton Company,
Feb. 9,
Jan. 3,
600,000
800,000
100,000
200,000
366,181
204.971
Appleion Shoe Com-
pany, The, .
Apr. 13,
Jan. 9,
25,000
~
-
-
3,028
Apsley Rubber Com-
pany, ....
Feb. 6,
Jan. 16,
100,000
38,104
with
R.E.
14,236
83,634
Archibald Wheel Com-
pany, ....
Jan. 19,
Jan. 16,
90,000
12,000
-
.
11,000
19,S«t
Arlington Gas Light
Company, .
Aug. 26,
Aug. 21,
70,000
70,000
with
real
estate
7,280
Arlington Hotel Com-
pany, The, .
Mar. 19,
1893.
c Oct. 22,
2,000
-
-
-
-
1,728
Arlington Mills, .
Feb. 28,
1894.
Jan. SO,
2,000,000
842,492
118,065
729,407
1,456,978
804,511
Arms Manufacturing
Company, The, .
Apr. 24,
Apr. 7.
10,000
.
-
6,784
(13,250
13,389
A rmatrong Transfer Ex-
press Company, .
May 9,
May 7,
100,000
75,866
20,000
66,866
-
15,002
Arnold Print Works, .
Oct. 26,
e Aug. 7,
160,000
761,385
with
real
estate
2,253,144
Arthur C. King Com-
pany, ....
Oct. 16,
Sept. 4,
7,000
—
—
—
-
1,793
Arthur Treat Company,
Sept. 10,
May 14,
9,000
-
-
-
-
12,248
Ashbumham Reservoir
Company, .
July 6,
June 12,
3,200
-
2,000
-
-
-
Ashby Reservoir Com-
pany, ....
Juno 16,
Mar. 12,
3,600
-
400
-
-
-
a Water works. b Lines, m
cters, lamp
« and glolx
M.
c Sh
ould have 1
been.
d And tools.
« Should 1
lave been b
eld.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
65
o/ Corporation* — Continaed.
AasBTfl—CoD.
1
1
Manufaoturos,
Materials and
Stock in Proo-
eas.
•
Oft
a
•
•
s
S
1
8
•
9
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
Total.
$1,499
•1.000
•460
-
$107,869
-
-
400
-
7,008
-
-
-
-
05,749
480
-
436
$2,052
68,415
887
-
320
-
10.005
9,902
-
-
-
28,669
26,137
-
-
58,224
176,195
285,481
-
tf 11.480
0 19,07S
-
1.187,194
26.925
-
1,180
-
81,142
43,910
-
1.029
-
181.813
57,802
-
-
-
99,754
( A 1,238
il20
\
\
-
-
78,608
/ 5.800
-
-
-
7,528
2,480,017
-
-
-
5,082.998
14,689
-
1.287
-
80.300
-
•
n 128,661
—
210,540 !
i with 0.
f & D. R.
1"
p 123,154
-
3.142.683
9,915
-
-
-
11,708
143
-
-
-
12,301
-
-
-
2.550
4,550 '
-
-
-
400
Liabilities.
o
2
CD
2
9)
«
CO
2 .
o
«««
n
5.
k a
a2>
P«
c'i
*
S 2
s
s 0<
o
$50,300
8.700
40,000
30,000^
5,000
10,000
160,000
600,000
25,000
100.000
00,000
7,000
2,000
2,000,000
10,000
100,000
150,000
7,000
0,000
3.200
3.500
$52,283
40,275
a 22,000
b 7,775
3,165
e475
3,808
18,213
16,105
515,000 \
4,481
48,012
\i
8,000
162
618
4,056
2,042,011
3,438
108,120
1,844,381
4,708
175
1,360
/$6,207
^1,001
m 25,961
$5,286
-
3,144
$254
15,474
-
1,607
-
456
-
1 65,896
-
1.661
-
10,000
23,801
6,754
-
7,798
-
572
-
775,490
•
264,597
11.429
^
1,648,302
-
3,216
-
-
-
$107,869
7,098
95,749
68,415
10,005
28,660
176,105
1,187,104
31,142
181.813
00,754
78,608
7,528
5,082,008
30.300
210.540
3,142,683
11,708
12,391
4,550
3,500
a Booda. b Notea.
/ Cotton freight.
) Scrip,
m Sorplua.
c Accrued interest.
g Interest.
k Dlvidenda unpaid.
91 Personal property.
d Insurance. s Wheels, etc.
h Coal. i Tar.
I Fomituro and furnishings.
o Charged off. p Bank stock, etc.
66
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894,
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
•gd
s
8
•
• o
«
s
S
•S&
4>
o o
5?0
WhenC
Filed.
«i4
O
Capital!
by the
Asaabet Maonfactaring
Company, .
Atherton Machine Com-
pany, . . . .
Atherton Paint Com-
pany, The, .
Atbol Oaa and Electric
Company, .
Atbol Machine Com-
pany, The, .
Athol Water Company,
Atkinson Coal Company,
Atlantic Cotton Mills, .
Atlantic Glae Company,
Atlantic Novelty Manu-
facturing Company, .
Atlantic Telegraph Com-
pany of MasBachnaetts,
Atlantic Works, .
Atlas Palp Company, .
Atlas Tack Corporation,
Anbam Mills Company,
Austin C. Wellington
Coal Company, .
Ayer Furniture Com-
pany, The, .
B. F. Nichols Belting
Company, .
B. F. Sturtevant Com-
pany, . . . .
B. H. Woodsum Com-
pany, . . . .
B. L. Bragg Company,
The
B. W. Fellows Machine
Company, .
Babcock Varnish Com-
pany, The. .
1804.
May 10,
June 8
Dec. 28
Oct. 18,
July 16,
Aug. 16
Apr. 6,
Jan. 19
Aug. 8
June 25,
July 7
Mar. 12
Mar. 12
Jnne28
Jnne 10
Aug. 28
Feb. 23,
Mar. 1
Sept. 24
Apr. 12,
Feb. 21
July 16,
Jan. 15
1804.
May 9
Jan. 17
Oct. 80
Apr. 3
June 10
July 17,
Apr. 4
Jan. 8
July 16
Apr. 10
June 27
Jan. 15,
Jan. 23
June 26
c June 15
c Aag.21
({Jan. 17
Jan. 31
Sept. 12
Jan. 6
Jan. 16
July 6
Jan. 6
$1,000,000
300,000
5,000
25,000
50,000
80,000
20,000
1,000,000
15,000
5,100
5,000
400,000
20,000
700,000
85,000
60,000
7,000
40,000
500,000
15,000
40,000
5,000
80,000
ASBKTfl.
•
s
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
1
•
9
C
$478,000
$00,000
$388,000
$558,476
$660,982
154,768
with
B.E.
118,737
78,010
-
-
-
-
9,897
8,000
1,000
7,000
a 57,606
1,275
21,001
with
R.B.
32,000
6,802
248,100
with
real
estate
2,233
13,000
with
R.E.
600
86.016
-
-
494,002
456,001
406,894
-
-
-
11,147
18.205
-
-
-
8,600
1.382
208,500
6 82,600
121,000
188,500
T8.611
-
-
400
16,638
8,617
200,000
74,000
126.000
332,347
484.324
-
-
-
-
142
-
-
34,215
0,036
20.828
-
-
-
-
1,808
-
-
-
17,200
7.234
-
-
-
50,001
328,160
-
-
-
15,376
4.322
-
-
-
-
31,610
-
-
-
600
884
-
-
-
-
34,716
a Mains, etc , both gas and eiectrio.
c Adjourned.
b And wharves and docks.
d Should have been held.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
67
of Corporations — Continued.
$1,020,788
119;87t
6,217
225
2S,3M
6,189
86«»196
18,062
1,200
40,007
4,220
680,902
1,402
21,202
11,02»
121,601
77,966
1,823
18,092
AaasTS — Con.
-■§2
Ik
•
3
i
1
8>J
ill!
»ten
"3 d
3
o
a
04
a
n
^
LlABILITIBS.
u
o
00
I
<•
Q
s
ca
2 .
00
I
I
a
•8.064
$66,610
20,811
a381
511
11,856
^600
6 6,000
18,600
C$20,000
d 25,000
« 14,617
$1,214
8,118
275
4,007
9,213
30,716
22,870
3,097
6,768
$2,685,761
494,752
17,660
67,106
86^658
251,849
58,705
$ $
1,000,000 1,058,065
800,000
5,000
26,000
60,000
80,000
20,000
1,727,441 ', 1,000,000
47,404
6,082
6,000
535,018
82,988
15,000
5,100
5,000
400,000
15,000
1,713,190 I 700,000 j
41,260
107,651
4,900
43,211
502,870
27,706
100,575
6,482
57,665
35,000
60,000
A 4,900
40,000
500,000
15,000
40,000
6,000
30,000
188,222
12,650
88,818
20,161
166,625
80,000
495,300
2,761
961
123,244
17,988
/280,000
685,060
6,260
47,651
$682,696
61,580
8,211
2,870
6,485
63,823
684
17,656
{ ^$48,130
8,288
9,389
4,824
282,061
29,648
21
ll,n4
6,221
5.762
798
$T.108
8,705
10,000
$
2,685,751
494,762
17,659
67.106
86,658
251,340
63,706
1,727,441
47,404
6.062
6,000
636,018
82,988
1,718,190
41,260
107,661
4,900
48,211
502,870
27.706
109,575
6,482
57,656
a Fanitare and flxiurea. b Rights of way over sundry highways, railways and bridges in Mass.
e SlnUag fond to radaem bonds. d Atlas bonds bought for sinking fund. ^
4 ICarket value, sinking fund. / Funded debt, 10-year bonds, due 1901.
g Surplus.
A Thirty per cent, of the par valne of stock was returned to the stockholders ; corporation to be dissolved.
f>8
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1«94.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
m
<8
>
9
•
OB
a
ta
V
*rf
o
hi
^
^•s
O
vz:
«
;^^
IS
^
Q
Bacon Paper Company,
The, . . . .
Bailey Weston Com-
pany, ....
Baker-Hunnewell Co., .
Baker's Pond and Drain
Fishing Company,
Banister Carley Com-
pany, The, .
Banker and Tradesman
Company, .
Bankers and Merchants
Telegraph Company
of Massachusetts, The,
Barbour Stockwell Com-
pany, . . . .
Bamaby Manufacturing
Company, .
Barnard Manufacturing
Company, .
Barnard Sumner ft Put-
nam Company, .
Barre Hotel Company,
The, . • . .
Battery Wharf Store
Company, .
Bay State Belting Com-
pany, . . . .
Bay SUte Belting Com-
pany (2d return),
Bay State Biscuit Com-
pany, The (for 1893),
Bay SUte Biscuit Com-
pany, The, .
Bay State Brick Com-
pany, . . . .
Bay State Coal Com.
pany, . . . .
Bay State Co^peratlTe
(Jreamery Association,
The, . . . .
Bay State Cordage Co., .
Bay SUte Corset Com-
pany
1894.
May 11
Apr. 11
June 13
Feb. 8,
Aug. 6,
Feb. 1
Feb. 2,
Apr. 18
Sept. 4
Oct. 81
Apr. 6
June 11
Nov. 1
Jan. 16
Dec. 17
Apr. 3
Dec. 6
Jan. 17
June 26
Feb. 12
Apr. 18
Aug. 6,
1894.
Mar. 14
Jan. 8
May 28,
1893.
Mar. 81
1894.
Aug. 1
Jan. 27
1893.
c June 13
1894.
Feb. 1
Apr. 80
Oct. 26
Feb. 16
Jan. 10
Oct. 3
1893.
Dec. 18,
1894.
Dec. 12
1893.
Dec. 12
1894.
Oct. 30
Jan. 9
June 1
Jan. 6
Jan. 9
July 10
$176,000
10,000
30,000
160
8,100
6,000
20,000
100,000
400,000
8.30,000
900,000
26,000
807,600
20,000
20,000
6,000
6,600
800,000
16,000
2,600
126,000
100,000
A88XT8.
a
I
9
•a fc
So
&.
0
PQ
$208,126
90,340
20,600
18,000
480,408
10,694
20,694
836,000
with
real
-
a $6,600
$30,277
60,068
with
R.E.
663.982
-
170,467
3,000
16,000
with
R.B.
4,663
6,031
6,663
14,031
with
real
-
8,068
-
1,000
-
43,818
200
-
a
5
-s
ja 9
esUte
$1,126
M,000
64,393
with
Vld'gs
877,003
4,636
4,636
(2 8,800
8.600
esUte
1,600
56,916
20,000
$136,946
14,388
18,105
2,199
6,646
31,621
113,645
18.033
145,879
9,202
26,447
34,509
4.343
8,741
24,440
9,364
300
S0,3>f9
89,010
a On leased land.
c Should have been held.
b Type, fnmitare, etc.
d And teams.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
69
of Corporations — Contiuued.
A8BST8— Cod.
3'ao
1^1 s
««
•
m
(C3
a
s .
5
a
•3
**
u
a
9.
flTS
•
o
4 a
•rf
•
•^ 8
«i
cs '
cS
3
n
$107,789
5,184
10,670
7.182
83,319
330,394
00,831
200,000
22,6»
20,763
074
1,690
146»988
3,000
03,167
26,802
s
o
$8,000
$4,021
-
a 219
-
6 523
-
c 20,000
-
-
-
3,867
-
d 4,000
$10,682
-
-
-
-
-
2,108
3,001
-
-
4,076
-
26,127
$450,882
10,701
46,300
0,004
7,646
20,000
230,673
1,037,471
662,314
400,746
41,682
408,605
63,201
86,562
8,617
11,080
506,428
24,418
2,800
236,276
I
QQ
Ck
6
$175,000 |$155,15e
I
t
10,000 I 0,720
80,000 12,180
150
8,100
5,000
20,000
100,000
400.000
330,000
300,000
25,000
307,500
20,000
20,000
5,000
6.500
300,000
15,000
2,500
125,000
110,190 I 100,000
126
1,260
113,804
507,000
117,700
36,000
r 16.000
t <>649
( 33
187,000
17,934
33,046
3,617
4,589
122,250
7,445
111,276
19,190
LlABILITIBS.
t
m
2
9
O
•a «
CQ
6
A .
&
3
O
$300
$120,723
-
71
-
3,120
-
535
-
2,646
-
26,360
.
48,730
$81,732
104,032
682
13,746
60,000
4,105
-
15,267
10,000
18,516
15,000
84,178 1
with
bal.
P.&L.)
073
1,000
:
^
$460,882
10,701
45,800
275
0,004
7,646
20,000
280,678
1,087,471
562,314
400,746
41,682
408,606
63,201
86,662
8,617
11,080
606,428
24,418
2,800
236,276
110,100
a Fixture aoeoont.
d Fnroilnre and flxtarea.
b Fizturea.
0 Interest.
c Telegraph property.
70 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abi>tract of Cektificates op Condition
HAMI
i
1
^
1^
11-
1^
B« Slits GMCompBn; .
^iT:
law.
oFeb-M,
$SOO,000
i 6,030,238
wub
real
eatalo
(30.8IS
B*r 8iue HoiiM. Pro-
priiton at tbe, .
Feb. U.
Jan. 30,
88.800
11S.00O
(76,000
$40,000
1,320
Ba; Slats Ice Compui;,
Jooe T.
Apr. IS,
82.000
20.000
0.500
-
13.431
Bay eui. Iron Com-
P«07
June 27,
JoneK.
MS.OOO
87.
-
4,000
Bay Bute MsUl Worki.
July IS.
May ai,
10.000
-
-
(3,083
VJM
B*y Slate Shoe and
tealher Company, .
Jan. 13.
1893-
Deo. at.
400,000
6a,»M
*llb
R.K.
30.138
482,348
Bay euie Whip Corn-
3S,0O0
26,000
14,«4
-
eaUte
Bay Btate Wortled Com-
pany. The. . . .
Feb. 3,
ISH.
Jan. 1.
Beaoh and Clacrtdge
Company, .
Bepl. 8,
July IS.
B0,OO0
*fl,7W
43.422
BencDD PnbllahlDf Com-
pany. Tbo, . . .
Mar. M.
Jan, i3.
«,000
.
-
II.OM
Baaoon Shoe UaDUfa<»-
Nov. 1.
Oct 31.
26,000
.
fl,4M
1S,I«
Boattle Zlno Work.
Apt. IT.
!Jan. 1,
10,000
«»
3,783
Bedford Lumber and
Man ufaolu ring Com.
Pi«iT
Oet 1,
JnneW.
60.000
20.730
■»ltb
R.B.
« 37.806
33,148
Beebe and Holbrook
Jan. IS.
Jm.. 6,
150.000
.
204.000
100,000
160.040
Belchetand Taylor Ag.
rdoullural Tool Coin-
W.OO0
8,000
a,4oo
2.000
400
24/100
1,S00
12,600
1,400
Uar. 14,
,r-,,
ISl
Bell Telepboue Com.
Ool. 13,
Sept. 11.
4M,000
.
Belrtdere WooHn Man-
ufacturing Company. .
Mar. 10,
Mar. t.
200.000
87,278
-llh
R.K.
41,000
84.416
BemK and Call Hard-
ware and Tool Com.
P'ny
Jnly 11,
July e.
28,400
33.223
with
R.E.
12.000
12,43*
Bennett UannfacKiring
Feb. 28,
Feb. 21.
700,000
Sll.fttB
8,7»3
802.883
7tJ.Ma
I04.7&6
Bent Broibore Company,
June £2,
rrMaylO,
10,000
-
2T.6I2
Beoll Company, Tbe, .
Jtine K.
Apr. 2.
800.000
300.000
_.»
rest
""'■
101,788
n book! or tbe eomp
;03 by (3,000,000.
M. d Bhonld hi
/ Bin Una land In bwfc.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
71
of Corporations — Continued.
Assets— Con.
LlABILITlBS.
■ Co
S « h
III-
Ssass
, Patent RighU.
1
•
8
1
1
•
3
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Total.
■
M
QQ
3
P.
CB
•
•
•s
1
Balance Profit
and Lobs.
Keaerve for De-
preciation.
■
3
o
♦35,e08
$25,701
-
$5,122,452
a$500/)00
b $49,143
-
$78,309
-
$
5,122,452
-
-
-
$20,&80
136,900
86,800
50,100
-
-
136,900
-
-
c 7,090
12,610
62,633
52,000
10,633
-
-
-
62,633
125
-
-
946,764
952,225
948,000
4,225
-
-
-
952,225
19,233
-
1,418
-
38.7271
10,000
13.983
-
10,871
$3,878
38,727
645,584
-
14,380
-
1,224,524
400,000
398,118
-
327,350
•
99,056
1,224,524
-
-
-
20,227
34,711
25,000
9,711
-
-
-
34,711
38,10T
-
-
88,283
60,000
25,288
-
2,945
-
88,238
-
-
700
3,673
16,429
15,000
429
-
-
-
15,429
7,578
-
-
-
29,1881
25,000
1,483
$737
1,500
468
29,188
1,013
$3,500
804
-
10,000
10,000
-
-
-
-
10,000
44,210
-
(25,000
-
149,903
50,000
97,457
-
2,446
-
149,903
03,8«5
-
-
548.914;
150,000
84,367
-
-
364,547
548,914
31,312
-
-
-
1
109,483
50,000
6,667
«
37,216
« 7,100
/9,500
1 109,483
282
-
-
10,750
3,000
6,265
-
1,185
300
10,750
145,654
-
-
1
358,367
200,000
158,367 J
with;
bal.
P8cL.
358,367
82,138
2
4,409
-
94,209
26,400
4,786
920
62,103
94,209
347,200
-
-
-
1,507,183
700,000
419,328
-
387,855
-
1,507,183
1,213
-
-
-
28,735
9
24,090
-
4.045
-
28,735
340.000
-
-
-
641,766
1
300,000
241,766
"
-
100,000
641,766
a Inereaaed on booka of the company Nov. 24, 1893 by $1,500,000.
b The oblli^tion of the company for $4,500,000 was cancelled under terms of chap. 474 of Acta of 1898,
&Dd written off the booka of the company Nov. 24, 1803. c Hornes, wagons, etc.
d Scoek io treaanry. « On buildings and machinery.
/ Oo buildings on leased land subject to removal. g Paid back, company in liquidation.
>H
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
l_
Attn:
E
■ ■
1
t640.»07
232,760
1
1
•U4.4M
1
1
1^
Berkeley Hou« Com-
I«H.
18M.
.„.
R.K.
E.E.
BarkihlreCotWoMaou-
IiclD ring Company, .
Oist. 1»,
Oct. 11,
m.oaa
U1.374
Berkrtdre Courier CCB-
p"y
Uar. S,
r. Jan. 30.
li,«W
.
11,«M
4,m
BerkehlreCreunetr Co-
Uar. 14,
Jan. 0,
2,300
1.200
MOO
•t,ooo
700
,
HeX & Fo-er Co.,
July 27,
Apr. 11,
10,W»
IS.H»
1,SS0
It.Oll
Ber)[.hlre 0I»> Bud
Company, The, .
Apr. B,
11,264
Berkshire HUH Co-op.
June 21,
Jan. 13.
2.W0
1.800
M»
1.000
1,000
B«rk.bir«OroComp.ny,
July 12,
Jnly 11,
100,000
2.700
BerkaUn Overall Com-
J« 1
10 000
-
a,ooo
S.MO
20 30
Borkahlre Tack Com-
pany. The. . . .
Jnly 9
«Jnne26,
li.000
l,»ll
Berkiblro Water Com-
pany. ....
ICay H
Apr. 20,
20,000
8.950
,
_
1.TOS
Be*arly BalMlng Auo-
eUUon, The, . .
July 11
JoneSO,
190.0D0
».-
IJ.glB
I2I,8«
2T,0IS
3.Sffl
BoverlyCo-opeiallveia-
Feb. »
Jan. 10,
8.000
-
4,014
Beverly Oa* and Elec.
irlc Company, . .
Aug. 11
joir II.
100.000
40.4M
with
E. E.
1 lafiii
1 Ml,717
{ 8.3»
Blgsloir Carpet Com.
pi.oy. . . .
June 20
U.y 30.
1,000,000
35O,S0O
wllb
R.E.
627,11)8
408,IM
W.000
.„.
K. E.
10.S4I
70.SS0
Blaok Itwk HoUl Com-
BUIr Camera Company,
May T
Jan. 18.
254,900
.
Bl>lr ManaractDrlng
Company, The, .
No7. B
Bept. IS.
as,ooo
1
11.011
1«.6»
Blake llannfaetnring
Company, . . .
JuDe a
Jan. 17,
is,ooo
3*.72»
7.W3
Bleak Honae Aiucla.
Uon
Bept. 7
Sept. 1,
20,000
I8/)00
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
73
o/ Corporations — Continued.
Assets — Con.
Liabilities.
•SI'S
Ml 3
•
08
&
a
2
•
s
s
1
•
3
Balance Profit
and Lo88.
•
a
•
M
1
I
•
5
1
f
Balance Profit
and Lobs.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
I
-
-
$12,778
-
$567,906
$150,500
$400,734
-
$T.672
-
$567,906
91S2.367
-
-
-
1,080,937
960,000
-
-
130,937
-
1,080,037
617
-
-
$2,462
19,281
15,000
4,281
-
-
-
19,281
-
-
a 400
-
2,800
2,226
6 75
-
-
-
2,300
-
-
MOi
3,082
1,876
1.707
-
-
-
3,082
3,850
-
-
-
36,783
16,700
■
-
10,000
$9,083
35,788
-
-
-
-
2.600
2,500
-
-
-
-
2,600
-
-
-
115,959
118,659
100,000
18,659
-
-
-
118,659
19,483
-
-
-
41,773
10,000 !
15,186
c 1,500
-
15,087
with bal.
P. &L.
j 41,773
1,582
-
898
7,901
6,000
2,901
-
-
-
7,901
-
-
J 38,706
1,822
46,686
20,000
<r 20,000
6 6,600
186
i -
-
46,666
-
-
-
-
170,569
120,500
41,600
-
4,781
8,788
170,569
10.915
-
a 500
-
16,429
8,000
3,884
/$818
2,127
600
a500
1 15,429
1.134
-
1,562
-
135,028
92,000
g 11,800
i
-
31,228
-
185,028
806.834
-
-
-
2,092,728
ll, 000,000
1
887,025
-
667,169
60,000
A87,934
2,092,728
825
<163
j 4,914
2,166
19,n9
15,000
4,779
-
-
-
19,779
-
it 2,000
15,839
54,000
25,000
29,000
-
-
-
54,000
177,380
*66,602
/ 61,677
64,104
429.043
264,800
174,243
-
-
-
429,043
8;»7
8,450
-
40,330
25,000
6,697
-
3,096
6,638
40,830
12,690
-
-
-
46.222
15,000
30,222
-
mm
-
45,222
-
-
2,000
-
20,000
20,000
-
-
-
-
20,000
a FlztarcB.
d PlpeB, etc.
g Special stock.
) Plant account.
6 Bills paj'able.
e Bonds.
h For fire insaranoe.
k Hotel fornitare.
c Dividend declared.
/ Dividends.
i Stock account.
/ $40,000 of this amoant is its own Btock, owned by the corporation.
^
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abslract of Cbktificates of Condition
-I
St
11
BoonColUaUJlli,
BoTdiT Clly HdKI Cam
Jorder CII7 Uanatact
Cmpiny CM rolm
1,100,000 $M
1SO,000 : »J,US
1(0,000 .- 261, 1«
1,000,000 ': ST9,S9>
D«. SI, I
Dflc. 31.
4I»,00
lOl.lW
102,140
S4fi.im
828,731
c4BI,T20
1(00,000
Boston BPdProilace
eiskiniblp Cofupanir.
Boalon An Campany, . I
Boalon Rank Note
LltbognpUc C
tjnt
lalon Cab Coinpuy, .
Hlon Cm Compmy,
T»,001
<t,Bn
41S,I1S
F<b. IS, IM.OOO I; 114,221
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
75
of Corporations — Continued.
$672,843
240,146
aoo
400
770
1,525
48,M0
61,000
640,907
83,826
11,316
40,20S
A88BT8 — Cod.
a
s
•
•
s
Profit
SB.
a
<8
8-^
2 « o a
aSoQ o
a
§
alan
and
a
&
s
n
-1
$27,836
a 21,313
6 7,322
21,318
(112,000
d 15,000
886,784
/ 1.177
P 1,307
1,000
A 5,400
1,069
1,866
$100 8,050
848,415
3
$1,215
11,674
8,035
47,926
2,087
2,917
41,627
390,462
697,500
$57,201
2,567,848
282,473
273,475
1,585,595
24,518
24,426
724,008
73,154
804,524
71,103
10,330
34,032
157,125
274,570
265.177
1,548,369
114,400
570,094
50,234
565,678
733,500
Liabilities.
S
t
S
CO
o
H
for
lion
alance
and L
cserve
precia
•
-a
o
»
tf
h
$30,000
1,200.000
150,000
150,000
1,000,000
24.000
24,000
500,000
60,000
712,600
70,000
10,000
30,000
7,800
150,000
150,000
1,000,000
63,100
250,000 I
25,000
150,000
827.500
$24,606
1,131,479
c 100,000 i
32,478 )
122,039
124,000
518
426
183,376
146,508
1.108
830
4,032
50,000
5,214
2,875
81,964
42,541
205.004
i 115,000
8,163
415,678
405,000
$2,595
53,556
$182,813
1,436
812,912
40,722
13,154
15,416
99,325
119,356
112,802
816,405
7,846
26,071
98,688
0 20,000
200,000
1,422
$57,201
2,567,848
282,478
278,475
1,585,595
24,518
24.426
724,098
78,154
894,524
71,103
10,880
84,032
157,125
274.570
266,177
1,548,869
114,409
570,094
59,234
566,678
782,500
a Fomlttire.
e Cltlzena' SaTiDgB Bank mortgage loan.
/ B«Dewal fnnd.
A Bonds National Exhibition Company.
b Interest, taxes, expenses, repairs and insarance.
d Contracts estimated. e And Insurance.
g Furniture and fixtures.
i Mortgage on real estate.
76
ANNUAL RETURNS OP CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
0)
>
s
•
s
a
3
«•
s
«
a
"ii
o
1^
1
fr
Q
"So
M O
Boston Coffer Dam Com>
pany, . . . •
Boa ton Co-operative
Baildlng Company, .
Boston Co- operative
Flower Growers Asso-
dation, The,
Boston Counter Com-
pany, • . . •
Boston Dental Mannfact-
nrlog Company, .
Boston Dack Company,
Boston Electric Coofe
pany
Boston Electric Light
Company, .
Boston Electric Protect-
ive Association, .
Boston Enterprise Man-
ufactaring Company,
The, ....
Boston Fire Brick and
Clay Retort Manafact-
nrlng Company, .
Boston Flintpaper Com-
pany, The, .
Boston Forge Company,
Boston Fresh Tripe
Company, .
Boston Fruit Company,
Boston Furnace Com-
pany, ....
Boston Gas Light Com-
pany, . . . .
Boston Herald Company,
The, . . • .
Boston Ice Company,
The, . . • .
Boston Journal of Com-
merce Publishing Com-
pany, ....
Boston Lead Manufact-
uring Company, .
May 29,
1894.
Apr. 24,
Mar. 27, Jan. 8,
Oct. 25,
Nov. 1,
July 26,
Mar. 6,
Apr. 16,
Bept. 12,
Feb. 19,
Sept. 8,
Apr. 6,
Mar. 9,
June 15,
Aug. 7,
Oct. 8,
Sept. 5,
Mar. 9,
June 6,
June 4,
Dec. 81,
Feb. 20,
Oct. 6,
Oct. 3,
6 July 7,
Feb. 14,
Jan. 27,
Aug. 14,
Jan. 17,
June 11,
Feb. 28,
Jan. 13,
Apr. 19,
July 9,
Sept. 26,
June 18,
Feb. 12,
May 21,
Apr. 10,
b Deo. 28,
Feb. 12,
$5,000
800,000
1,500
30.000
$50,000
350,000
100,000
2,000,000
6,000
10,000
140,000
20,000
100,000
22,500
500,000
25,000
2,500,000
200,000
300,000
20,000
460,000
5
$349,881
70,000
532,880
2,000
171,930
19,104
85,844
1,338,235
6,994,534
400,000
210,000
A88BT8.
i
tf^
1^
S o
•
•
*£
a
•p.
a
Land
ter
S
•§1
JO «
S3S
$830
with
with
with
with
4,504
with
R.E.
R. E.
R.E.
real
$14,600
R.B.
$«,00S
2,004
a $12,288 50,848
79,465
5,981
(/ 1,837,961
4,700
estate
2,275
/ 61,796
1,500
with
with
with
real
real
R. A.
estate
32,603
121,104
c 37,660
130,553
1 1.196
I « 2,188
4,614
149,490
7,158
17,562
6,008
648,112
33.235
313,361
^200,000 131,569
eeUte
57,697
4,000 16,208
65,000
166,000
a And fixtures.
c Including some uncollectable aooounta.
€ Book accounts. / And tools.
b Adjourned.
d And lines, lamps, etc.
g Plant.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
77
of Corporations — Continued.
Assets — Oon.
• 2 2
r is a
%\'^ I
Cm *- •
5?
I
a
Out
•
8
I 4
«
S^
§
2"0
«2
cs *
a
n
$32,609
36.614
153,088
42,212
46,406
5,000
2,614
27.033
28,200
7,832
wIthcMh
23.200
86.413
$10,005
446
$16,280
6,081
6,600
d 7,355
«30
50,000
178,285
12,066
i & ' recciv-
i debU able
76,000
8,865
o
$4,285
8,860
7,158
180,164
80,760
$5,115
375,060
2,004
06,186
72,477
424,567
108,164
2,552,802
15,680
13,058
321,420
56,470
143,411
28,305
1,081,847
62,602
7,304,308
331,560
721,861
118,828
610,204
LlABtLITIBS.
M
2
OQ
3
4>
OB
&
o
u •
o
Q .
*- S
o o
SI
5
o
$5,000
$115
210,000
03,600
1,500
-
80,000
51,050
50,000
22.477
350,000
2,580
00,800
777
1,700,000
511,081
6,000
-
10,000
1,047
140,000
110,500
20,000
35,032
100,000
30,201
1 /701
22,600
8,788
500,000
411,858
-
-
-
a $18,140
-
504
b $10,010
-
-
$8,578
-
16,587
-
341,721
1,355
8,834
-
2,011
-
61,020 j
-
588
■
12.410
$5,115
$50,220 875,060
2,004
4,217
c 63,305
with bal.
P.&L.
25,000 37,602
2,500,000
200,000
«
300,000
20,000
450,000
261,321
3,183
421,861
08,828
140,056
2,022
with )
1,060,480 { bal. \
P.&L.
4,682,087
78,386
50,000
10,838
06,186
72,477
424,557
106,164
2,552,802
15,680
13,058
321,420
56,470
148,411
28,305
1,081,347
62,602
7,304,806
381,560
721,861
118,828
610,204
a DlTldeod unpaid.
d Conatraetlon.
b Sarplua.
e OfBloe ftiraitore.
c Guaranty and renoyation.
/ Sundry workmen.
78
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
BoitOD Lighterage &
TowlngCompany/rhe,
BMtOD MaDofacturlng
Company, The (for
Boston MannfaotTiring
Company, .
Boston Marble and Qran>
Ite Company, The,
Boston Mirror Company,
Boston Maslo Hall Asso-
ciation,
Boston Oregon Mast
Company, .
Boston Parcel Delivery
Company, .
Boston Plate and Win.
dow Olaas Company, .
Boston Real EsUte As-
sociation of Boston, .
Boston Regalia Com-
pany. The, .
Boston Robber Com-
pany, . . . .
Boston Rubber Bhoe
Company, .
Boston School Supply
Company, .
Boston Spar Company,
The, . . . .
Boston Specialty and
Toy Company, .
Boston Stereotype Fonn-
dry, . . . .
Boston Storage Ware-
honse Company, The,
Boston Terra Cotta Com-
pany, . . . .
Boston Theatre, The
Proprietors of the,
Boston Thread and
Twine Company,
Boston Times Company.
The, . . ,[
1894
Ang.
I.
7p
Jan.
22.
Dec.
24,
June SO,
Apr.
8.
July 26,
May
8,
June 20,
Apr.
8,
June
e.
Nov.
27,
June 10,
May
21,
Apr.
0,
May
2,
Mar.
14.
June 11,
May
0.
Apr.
».
Jan.
12,
Dec.
M,
Nov.
2.
1894.
Apr. 90,
1803.
Dec. 18,
1804.
Dec. 17,
June 23,
Jan. 1,
June 13,
a May S,
May 14,
Jan. 1,
Apr. 18,
Nov. 23,
Apr. 30,
May 16,
Mar. 6,
Apr. 0,
Feb. 1,
May 28,
Apr. 12,
Jan. 8,
$30,000
800,000
800,000
25.000
100,000
100,000
30,000
60,000
C00,000
100,000
10,000
300,000
6,000,000
26,000
10,000
6,000
10.000
400,000
60,000
Jan. 8, 126,000
July 26, 80,000
Oct. 16, 24,000
ASSSTS.
a
m
73
$600,000
643,181
226,000
178,774
161,663
530,000
^
•§5
8)
a
2
"S
PQ
a
m
482,697
633,000
-
♦li.Ml
with
real
esUte
with
real
estate
-
700
-
10,816
with
R.E.
10,000
-
$36,487
-
-
-
1,873
-
-
166,040
*"
-
272,000
-
1,000
$117,990
864,707
-
-
-
2,000
•
78,672
-
74.010
-
-
-
S «>
-I
3
126,729
106,664
4,990
46,864
66,385
8,804
2,790
226,923
4,808
3,410
283,172
2,668,368
16,270
22,302
10,871
9,;M7
08,441
305
16,839
6,743
a Meeting In lieu of annual.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
79
0/ Corporations — Continaed.
A88STB — OOD.
135
5
3
a
e
•
s
1.
2
cuS
0
o
a
8«J 1
1
3
n
LlABII<ITIE8.
•
J4
1
^.
•
1
1
OQ
1 *
•
•
S
i
fl a
Reserve for
preclation
H
1 o
Q
«
CQ
s
o
$720,801 1
741^0 j
6,000
42,566
withM.
M.M.
withM.
M.M.
and S
In P.
and 8.
in P.
29,315
180,605
12,542
S16,fi07
2,116,400
14,8»4
2,000
18,347
iM^ns
17,036
le$50.483
5,801
/ 1,223
17,529
15,000
i ^7,646
A 11,813
$7,506 $82,344
1.447,530
1,400,351
10,610
609
I
8,877
30,700
100,286
291.896 I
36,119
63,163
595,403
40,296
19,048
$90,000
800,000
800,000
25,000
100,000
100,000
30,000
50,000
600,000
20,404
10,000
024,711 j' 300,000
$2,844'
631,276
659,091
5,700
140,000
5,760
5,691,758
5,000,000
80,260 I 26,000
26,001
10,871
1,000
10,000
6,000
10,000
491,944 400,000
100,601
533,305
274,624
26,656
50,000
125,000
80,000
24,000
94,871
17,000
7,186
445,501
17,508
12,383
15.001
4,467
b $2,500
16,000
33,194
n50,000
194,624
2,656
-
-
$12,611*
a $3,643
23,647
a 4,513
236
-
c 60,804
(2 501
-
359
8,163
-
622
-
268
2,533
1,912
( with
< bal.
rp.&L.
-
179,120
374,160
200,000
-
1,877
404
-
76,944
-
12,407
5,000
258,305
-
"
-
$82,344
1,447,580
1,490,351
30,700
100,236
291,395
36.119
53,163
505,498
40,205
048
024,711
I 19.
5,601,768
80,260
26,001
10,871
10.000
401,044
100,601
583,306
274,624
26,666
a Oaaranty and inanrance. b Reaerve for Insa ranee of milla and machinery.
c Balanoe inoome aocoani. d Unexpended balance to repair fire loaa. e Personal property.
/FLxtorea. ^Bookplate*. A Kilna, tools, etc. {Mortgage.
80
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
KAMB OF CORPO-
RATION.
Boston Tow Boat Com
pany, .
Boston Trading and Ex
port Company, The,
Boston Transcript Com
pany, .
Boston Transfer Com
pany, The, .
Boston Veterinary Hos
pltal, The, .
Boston Wharf Company
The, • . •
Boston Woven Hose and
Robber Company,
Bourne Mills, .
BouvA, Crawford & Co
(Corporation), .
Bowenvllle Coal Com
pany. The, .
Bowker Fertilizer Com
pany, . . .
Boyd and Corey Boot
and Shoe Manufactur
ing Company, The,
Brackett*s Market Cor
poration,
Bradford Joint Com
pany, . .
Bradford Tarn Mills (for
1893), .
Bradford Tarn Mills,
Bradley FertlUaer Com
pany, .
Brainard Milling Ma
chine Company, .
Brain tree Wood and
Lnmber Company (for
1803)
Braintree Wood and
Lumber Company,
Brant Rock Water Com-
pany (for 1893), .
Brant Rock Water Com.
pany, . . . .
o
1894.
May 9
May 20
Mar. 13
May 17
Jan. 11
Feb. 14
Dec. 22
Nov. 3
Mar. 12,
Apr. 27
May 2,
Dec. 7
Mar. 18
Feb. 6
Feb. 9
Mar. 6
June 19
Mar. 6
Jan. 12,
Dec. 13
Jan. 4,
Dec. 11
1894.
Apr. 17,
Apr. 20,
Feb. 19,
May 5,
a Jan. 8,
Feb. 6,
Nov. 20,
Oct. 22,
Feb. 20,
Apr. 18,
,,Feb. 14,
Deo. 1,
Jan. 6,
Jan. 16,
1893.
Jan. 7,
1894.
a Jan. 27,
1893.
a Dee. 27,
1894.
Feb. 6,
1893.
Dec. 18,
1894.
Nov. 7,
1893.
a Dec. 2G,
1894.
Nov. 27,
$1,000,000
7,000
60,000
20,000
8,000
600,000
A88STS.
s
I
s|
a
2
D
$71,718
2,166,636
600,000 : 2ftl,466
400,000 400,000
100,000
40.000i
600,000
260,000
12,600
i
6,000
6,600
6,500
400,000
76,000
I
6,ooo;
6,000
I
5,000
5,000
16,529
84,963
282,914
60,604
60,000
31,772
184
600
2,000
$68,600
$3,218
30,000
1,656,183 6510,453
with
with
30,776
with
with
with
5,721
R.B.
real
4,187
R.E.
R.E.
R.E.
26,051
159
25
500
100
2,000
-
rith
R.E.
o
a
1
$7,065
23,000
617
96,221
estate
8,500
4,000
63,223
8,000
5,500
6,489
55,678
1,000
1,000
c 5.500
c 6,000
$98,727
3,733
14,572
4,186
2,547
367,323
23S.8W
76,505
14,729
9,430
656,924
103,517
9,482
5,300
1,154
345
10,000 978,064
17.796
1,460
•Hft
25
I
a Adjourned.
b And improvements.
c And mains.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
81
of Corporations — Continued.
Assrrs —
Con.
1
iVt
^ bC.4
r tf B
Patent Righli.
■
■
0
S
S
1
3
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
Total.
$22,897
-
$
1,025,131
-
$
1,225,538
9.606
-
-
-
13,808
-
-
428
-
68,000
-
-
M7.000
$101
21,287
-
-
-
720
8,267
-
-
-
-
2,588,576
453.709
$1,000
50,075
-
1,086,863
32,457
-
-
-
507,962 '
127,668
-
39,843
-
207,269
10,208
-
-
-
58.601
307,258
1
-
-
1,247,096
46,650
<
-
17,140
280,034
1,716
-
8,028
-
19,226
17.605
f
-
700
-
26,603
-
827
7.481
530
-
^
1,472
8,845
159.581
-
50,000
-
1,247,645
95,200
-
4,000
-
204,446
4,840
-
-
-
7,493
3,605
-
<;200
1,842
7,539 j
-
-
-
-
7,525
-
-
•
8,077
LlABILITIBB.
GD
t
Profit
u.
orDe-
on.
o
^s
II
^s
go*
n
03
o
$
1,000,000
7,000
60,000
20,000
8,000
600,000
600,000
400,000
100,000
40,000
600,000
250,000
12,500
6,000
6,500
5,500
400,000
75,000
6,000
6,000
5,000
$84,533
4,478
1,287
267
461,263
486,863
1,752
107,260
5,781
342,407
30,034
4,876
3,507
1,981
3,345
385,473
59,985
1,350
1,539
2,500
8,000
-
$24,545
$
a 116,460
-
1,925
-
$8,000
~
c 1,472,813
-
-
-
91,210
15,000
-
12,870
-
(112,000
142,689
150,000
1,850
-
™
16,873
728
"
«
462,172
-
09,461
-
-
143
-
25
.
-
77
-
$
1,225,588
13,398
68,000
21,287
8,267
2,533,576
1,086,363
507,962
207,269
58,601
1,247,006
280,034
19,226
26,603
7,481
8,845
1,247,645
204,446
7,493
7,539
7.525
8,077
a And inanranoe.
d Reaeire for contUigeDcy.
b Horaea, wagona and good-will.
6 Horsea.
c SurpluB.
82
ANNUAL RETURNS OP CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates
OP Condition
When Certificate was
Filed.
•
1
o
1
Capital Stock as fixed
by the Corporation .
A88BT8.
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
i
1
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
1
2
o
Machinery.
Cash and DebU
Receivable.
BrldiKewater Box Com-
pany
18M.
Oct. 15,
1894.
Sept. 15,
$80,000
$27,272
with
R.E.
$6,304
$12,953
Brldgewater Electric
Company, The, .
Sept. 4,
July 21,
15,000
3,234
with
R.E.
10,918
949
Brid^waters Water
Company, .
June 25,
aJune28,
100,000
10,000
$500
$9,500
7,000
450
Brigga and AUyn Manu-
facturing Company, .
Mar. 1,
Feb. 14,
28,000
80,000
with
R.B.
10,000
26,000
Brigga Carriage Com-
pany
Mar. 26,
1893.
Deo. 30,
30,000
18.000
2,000
16,000
5,000
28,943
Brigham Factory Com-
pany, ....
June 10,
1894.
Apr. 25,
17,200
7.000
with
R.E.
1,000
113
Brlatol Manufacturing
Corporation,
Aug. 20,
July 17,
600,000
184,108
12,457
171,646
540.082
33,793
Brockton Co operative
Boot and Shoe Com-
pany, The, .
Feb. 8,
Jan. 6,
23,000
9,450
4,000
5,450
7,850
20,149
Brockton Gas Light
Company, .
Aug. 22,
Aug. 14,
178,500
-
"
49,000
216,265
6.792
Brockton Industrial Cor-
poration,
Apr. 25,
Apr. 10,
8,000
8,049
with
R.E.
1,436
295
Brockton Real Estate and
Improvement C o m-
p*ny
July 25,
1883.
Feb. 7,
6,000
^
■
■
/
^
Brookfleld Brick Com-
pany, ....
Oct. 3,
1894.
6 Jan. 27,
10,200 ,
-
.
-
-
10,200
Brookllne Artificial Ice
Company, .
July 6,
c Jan. 17,
1
40,000
17,900
7,636
10,264
14,674
8,215
Brookllne Gas Light
Company, .
Oct. 23,
Sept. 26,
1,000,000
540,932
with
R.E.
(22,388,121
66,736
Brookside Paper Manu-
facturing Company, .
July 27,
6 July 19,
25,000
4,000
with
R.E.
3,000
-
Brown and Simpson
Company, The, .
Jan. 80,
Jan. 16,
75,000
-
-
-
5,428
92,605
Brown Bag Filling Ma-
chine Company, The, .
Aug. 10,
May 16,
20,000
-
-
-
2,500
380
Brown Electric Com-
pany, ....
Apr. 14,
Jan. 16,
11,000
**
-
12,723
BryAot Box Company,
The, ....
Mar. 17,
Feb. 10,
6,000
-
8,518
2,499
Buildings Cleaning Co.,
The, ....
Apr. 20,
Mar. 12,
2.000
1 *"
-
-
-
2,564
Burke Heel Company, .
Aug. 22,
July 2,
15,000
1
4,576
with
R.E.
1,965
8,459
a Adjourned.
c Statement of April 1, 1894.
b Should have been held.
d And street mains.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
83
of Corporations — Continaed.
Assets— Con.
LlABILinSS.
Patent RlghU.
1 Miscellaneous.
1
Balance Profit
> and Loss.
o
H
$79,478
•
JM
1
t
•
5
•
s
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De>
preclatlon.
•
1
$32,940
-
$30,000
$45,400
-
$4,078
-
$79,478
843
-
a$16,74e
$1,936
34.028
16,000 j
615,000
4,028
1 -
-
-
' 84,028
c 206^11
-
-
21,239
244,000
100,000
144,000
-
-
-
244,000
4S,000
-
1,000
-
158,000
28.000
108,000
-
20,000
$2,000
168,000
48,213
-
1,210
-
101,866
80.000
62,076
-
9.290
-
101,866
-
-
-
15,687
23,700
17,200
6,500
-
-
-
23J00
148,478
-
-
-
906^466
600,000
889,629
-
16,827
-
906,456
10,306
-
100
-
47,854
23,000
21,107
-
2,608
1,139
47,854
4,611
-
0,686
39,832
325,035
178,500
146,636
-
- •
-
825,035
-
-
-
9,780
8,000
1,600
-
180
-
9,780
1.
-
—
-
10,200
10,200
•
.
.
.
10,200
-
6 4,000/
4.560
16,281
59,630
34,000
26,680
-
-
-
69,630
41,226
-
11,047
1,439
2,991,401
1,000,000
1
1,991,401
-
-
-
2.991,401
- 1
-
-
-
7,000
1
25,000
1
(2 82,688
-
-
67,688
62,908
-
-
-
161,029
1
75,000
85,566
-
463
-
161,029
4,500 '
$10,315
-
2.988
20,683
20,000
683
-
-
-
20,683
10,087
1
2,780
1,585
-
27,125
1 11,000
16,328
-
802
-
27,126
3,066
-
630
677
11,189
6,000
5.189
-
-
-
11,189
-
J
1,070 \
-
4,090
' 2,000
2.090
-
-
-
4,090
7,068
-
-
-
17,062
15,000
-
-
2,062
-
17,002
a Line*, meters, etc.
(I All due stoekholders.
6 Bonds. c Mains, service pipe and wells.
« Furniture and fixtures.
84
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
a
^
9
* 1
•
«i
fl
c
(d
S
O^
fl o
l«
Si
O O
I*
Burleigh Roek Drill
Company, The, .
Burlelgli Tunnel Com-
pany, The, .
Batcher Poliah Company,
The
Butchera' Rendering Aa.
Boclation, Co-opera-
tive, ....
Butchera' Rendering
Company of Fall River,
The, ....
Batchera' Slaughtering
and Melting Aaaoeia-
tion, «...
Butterfleld Printing and
Binding Company,
Byron Weaton Com-
pany, ....
C. A. Croaa & Co., Ineor-
porated,
C. A. Edgarton Manu-
facturing Company,
The
C. A. Nichola Company,
The, ....
C. B. Cook Laundry
Company, ...
C. F. Paige & Co., Ineor-
porated,
C. H. Dunham Company,
The
C. I. W. Maynard Com-
pany
C. T. Sam peon Manu-
facturing Company
(for 1808), .
C. T. Sampaon Manu-
facturing Company, .
C. W. Mutell Manufaot-
uring Company, The,
Cable Rubber Company,
Calumet Woolen Com-
pany, . . . .
18M.
June 16
Jan. 18
May 24
Oct. 4
Feb. 21
July 26
Apr. 9
Feb. 9
June 14
May 11
June 1
Nov. 22
Mar. 16
Sept. 7
Apr. 4
Jan. 2
Nov. 17
July 18
Jan. 17
June 14,
1894.
a June 9,
Jan. 15,
Apr. 21,
July 11,
1893.
Oct. 80,
1894.
July 19,
Jan. 30,
Feb. 3,
May 28,
Feb. 16,
a May 26,
a July 9,
Mar. 7,
Aug. 9,
Mar. 14,
1893.
Nov. 26,
1894.
Nov. 1,
1893.
Nov. 7,
1894.
Jan. 15,
June 12,
$120,000
60,000
6,000
3,000
20,000
300,000
5,000
400,000
60,000
60,000
20,000
20,000
12,000
25,000
12,000
50,000
60,000
16,000
100,000
300,000
Assets.
•
1
1
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
i
a
2
p
Machinery.
•
-
-
-
-
$17,491
$60,000
with
R.E.
$250
-
-
-
-
400
6,352
-
-
-
3,000
1,447
23,834
$2,600
$21,334
8.648
2,817
179,745
-
300,000
12,000
11,126
-
-
-
15,087
2,113
158,600
with
R.E.
55,000
70,873
-
-
-
61,479
66.897
*
29,050
with
real
eatate
47,925
-
-
-
-
3,616
1
-
-
-
5,500
2,832
-
-
2,282
-
6,688
-
-
-
-
20.4S0
-
-
-
-
2,370
30,000
with
R.E.
20,000
214,586
30,000
with
R.E.
20,000
186,636
-
-
-
2,753
80,000
-
-
38,162
22,516
125,000
35,000
90,000
75,000
43,132
a Adjourned.
b Bllla receivable.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUxMENT — No. 10.
85
of Corporations — Contiuued.
Assets — Con.
Liabilities.
115
Ills
•
1
a
1
•
1
a
JS
mm
i
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
3
O
H
•
1
m
3
•s.
3
■
f
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
1
$24,960
1
$90,000
$22,000
-
$154,451
$120,000
$1,596
-
$22,855
-
$154,451
-
-
-
$9,026
59,276
60,000
9,276
-
-
59,276
2,000
-
-
-
8,752
6,000
1,830
$730
$1,192
8,752
2,000
-
1,511
-
7,967
3,000
4,878
-
89
-
7,967
1,646
-
813
3,407
34,065
20,000
14,065
-
-
34,065
11,008
-
4,000
-
517,909
300,000
202,158
-
16,811
617,969
5,312
-
125
1.280
23,876
5,000
18,876
-
-
-
28,876
136,807
-
24,000
-
446,840
400,000
14,050
-
81,290
-
445,340
&2,S51
-
-
-
120,427
60,000
a 44,434
1,244
s
14,849
-
120,427
64.766
-
8,186
-
184,936
50,000
51,243
• ^
5,661
28,182
184,986
12,489
-
5 80,000
1,542
47,647
20,000
27,647
"
-
-
47,647
135
-
-
12,765
21.282
20,000
1,232
-
-
-
21,282
11,365
-
-
20,885
12,000
7,806
«■
202
327
20,386
81,011
-
-
-
51,491
25,000
26,088
-
403
-
61,491
S1.0Q3
-
1,354
444
25,201
12,000
18,201
-
-
-
25.201
38,925
-
-
-
308,511
50,000
178,723
-
89,788
86,000
803,511
46,850
-
-
-
283,495
50,000
155,000
-
8,657
69,988
288,495
7,838
-
2,946
6,179
19,216
15,000
4,216
-
-
-
19,216
28,M4
-
4,348
123,070
100,000
23,070
-
-
-
128,070
100,887
- .
12,925
-
356,944
300,000
56,944
-
-
-
356,944
a Bills payable.
b Plates, etc.
m
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Cambridge Baking Com-
pany (for 1898), .
Cambridge Baking Com-
pany, • . . .
Cambridge Blectrio
Light Company, .
Cambridge Gaa Light
Company, .
Cambridge Lyceum,
Cambridge VinegarCom-
pany, • . • .
Cambridgeport Diary
Company, .
Oantelo Manufaoiaring
Company, .
Cape Ann Anchor
Works,
Cape Ann Drop Forge
Works,
Cape Ann lalnglaae Com-
pany, • • • •
Cape Ann Printing Com-
pany, . . . .
Carew Manufaclnring
Company, .
Carpenter-Morton Com-
pany, . . ' .
Carter, Rice & Co. Cor-
poration,
Carver Cotton Gin Com-
pany, • . . .
Casfllno Art Company,
The, . . . .
Caton Medical Specific
Company, .
Cattle Fair Hotel, .
Central Mica Mining
Company, .
Central Mills Company,
Central Square Wharf
Company, .
Century Stove Company,
The, . . . .
c:
a ^
»=:
1894.
May 21
July 16,
Mar. 16,
Feb. 14
June 1
Aug. 7,
Mar. 20,
July 6
Mar. 8
Mar. 8
Nov. 2
May 28
Mar. 3
Jan. 20
July 9
Feb. 9,
Nov. 8
Jan. 22
Apr. 20
June 25
Jan. 23
Apr. 3
Sept. 13
a
V
V
o
«
eS
£•5
O
Abbstb.
ll I
I
&
i
fcc
5 o
m
«
*£
a
5
a •
2
•8
S"
a
S
a
I?
1803.
Jan. 18,
1894.
Jan. 17,
Mar. 6,
Jan. 28,
May 1,
July 9,
Mar. 15,
c June 20,
1893.
Sept. 18,
1894.
Jan. 9,
Oct. 29,
*May 16,
Jan. 31,
Jan. 22,
c Mar. 6,
Feb. 6,
May 2,
$5,000
l' I
5,000 l> - ' -
!' i
200,000 • $73,199 I with
1,000,000
20,000
12,000
50,000
25,000
100,000
20,000
30,000
6,000
85,000
100,000
800,000
100,000
6,000
Jan. 2, 5,000
Mar. 27, 27,660
Apr. 17,
Jan. 16,
Mar. 27,
Feb. 5,
60,000
150,000
60,000
14,000
66,143
21,600
87,338 with
12,182
6,000
17,000
82,625
212,465
30,000
69,600
1,060
18,000
with
. with
$10,000
6,000
with
with
48,100
R.B.
$766,643
$600
600
25,166
R.E.
a 366,600
i with
i b'ld'gs
800
16,063
2,640
48,808
R.E. (116,365
R.E.
7,000
< 56,000
20,625
R.B.
R. E.
21,600
82,641
6,000
4,160
2,600
40,000
i.069J
20,000
116,942
2,000
$4,600
4,600
16,066
I 16«,]47
6168
0,213
79,163
481
34.010
646
11,460
4,560
128,224
86,181
381,206 >
/9S.7651
06,488
2,682
1,160
8,647
4,807
a And pole lines.
ii And tools.
b Less dividend paid May 1.
f Mill.
c Adjourned.
/ Notes receivable.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
8
of Corporations — Continued.
Ambts— Oon.
Hi
•
1
III
tf
«•
nil
1
s
&
9
2
a
S
1
$8,514
2»,M6
3,922
99,468
16,300
$26,052
a.:
2
Liabilities.
o
IS
3
9
s
Profit
■a.
So
o
*-3S
alanoe
and L
eaorve
precia
n
tf
o
4,448
741
74,067
51,342
308,766
71,966
24,864
800
$25,000
130
50,641
7,588
-i
1,000
1,500
1,881
« 8,700
/lO.OOO
$10,222
100
900
2,600
6,450
43.753
2,631
$5,000
5,000
401,011
1,007,899
21,668
14,883
180,270
80,001
149,865
53,724
57,761
25,550
325,516
$5,000
5,000
200,000 I
700,000
20,000
138,404 I 100,000
12,000
50.000
25,000
100,000
20,000
30,000
5,000
35,000
$
a200,000
51,448
3,347
5 800
c40
1,891
2,804
2,000
42,512
33,724
4,160
16,600
154,266
36,087
I ( ^150,000
1,015,053 ' 300,000 { A 330,400
163,134
221,474
27,446
8,000
77,836
48,750
100,000
5,000
5,000
27,650
48,750
286,079 150.000
18,000 60,000
|l
24,471 ,1 14,000
20,469
8,000
70,729
$29,568
304,552
992
77.975 1
$10,000
<f828
10,500
$3,950
2,867
10,471
$5,000
5,000
491,011
1,007,899
21,668
14,383
180,279
2,001 1,000 80,001
7,358
13,101
i 65,519
71,474
1,977
33,435
18,521
- /
149,865
53,724
57,761
26,550
186,250 325,516
- j 188,404
1,015,058
50,000
16,750
j 40,829
221,474
27,446
8,000
77,886
48,750
286,070
60,000
24,471
a Bonda. b Notea payable. c Accmed rent to May 1, due Harvard College.
d Rewrve for repaira, tazea, losarance, etc. e Stable, real estate and plant. / Electric plant.
g Mortgage on real estate, h Notes payable, i Surplus. J Improvement accoant.
88
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates op Condition
NABIE OP CJOEPO-
BATION.
00
at
^
2
g
a
\
a
o^
«-i
e «
o
^g
^
1
ASSKTS.
i2.
o o
"5.5?
ii
.1
5
5
&^ il I
O 'I «
•
«8
^c
•
•
&•
5 o
9
o
*£
a
a
'0 »•
•o
J3
a «
32
o
J-
0
ChAce Mills, .
Chadwick Lead Work^ ,
Chadwlck Plash Com.
paoy, . . . .
Champion Card and Pa-
per Company,
Chapman Valve Manu-
facturing Oompanyt .
CharlemoDtCo-operatlye
AsaocUtlon,
Charles E. Harwood
Company, .
Charles Perry Mann fact-
oring Company, .
Charles River Embank-
ment Company, .
Charlestown Enterprise
Company, .
Charlestown Gas and
Electric Company,
Chase & Company Cor-
poration, .
Chase Elevator and Man-
ton Windlass Com-
pany
Chase TurblneManafact-
nring Company, .
Channcy Hall School, .
May 17,
May 29,
Nov, 6,
Nov. ft,
I Nov. 5,
Nov. 5,
July 25,
Apr. 4,
a And improvements.
Chebaoco House Com-
pany, The, .
Chelmsford Foundry
Company, .
Chelsea Express De-
spatch Company,
Chelsea Express De-
spatch Company,
Chelsea Express De-
spatch Company,
Chelsea Express De- '
spatch Company,
Chelsea Gas Light Com-
pany
Chelsea Pottery U. 8.,
The
1894.
Oct. 25,
Mar. 18,
Jan. 18,
Feb. 21,
Feb. 21,
July 26,
Feb. 8,
Feb. 23,
May 8,
M^r. 21,
Feb. 16,
Mar. 17,
Nov. 21,
Aug. 16,
Apr. 16,
1804. , I,
Oct. 28, $500,000 I
Mar. 8, 300,000
Jan. 16,
Jan. 18,
Jan. 81,
Apr. 25,
Jan. 1,
1893.
Nov. 1,
1894.
Feb. 7,
Jan. 9,
Jan. 15,
Jan. 24,
Oct. 17,
July 21,
Mar. 80,
Mar. 5,
Jan. 10,
1801.
Sept. 8,
1892.
Sept. 13,
1893.
Sept. 12,
1894.
Sept. 4,
July 17,
1893.
c Dec. 18,
26,000
200,000
600,000
6,000
75,000
6,000
1,000,000
6,000
600,000
100,000
276,000
87,000
100,000
32,000
16,000
10,000
6,000
5,000
6,000
$160,000
67,765
222,860
1,480
88,000
1,650
689,684
$7,000
with
with
800
with
with
a900,600
with
$403,000
real
I
10,000
b And lines.
-
-
44,780
with
100,000
-
12,000
with
6,000
2,000
162,767
with
3,631
with
R. E*
1,180
K* 1£.
R. E.
real
82,241
B.E.
R.E.
4,000
600
500
600
600
R.E.
real
f wUh
t bMdg*fl
estate
$26,000
70,678
124,234
10,629
8.706
estate
80,000
47,823
18,684
I
OS
$22,626
98,215
6,940
161,427
160,023
758
88,773
5,361
21,278
6,483
38,743
66,484
2,841
83,981
1.412
-
193
2,000
10,400
-
1,872
1.92::
-
2.5*3
-
3.3o0
6 276,436
12,966
estate
19
c Afj^ourned.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
89
of Corporations — Continued.
Aarars — Oon.
A • U
•
5
Sa&l
^
sS ^
M
S m O
sli:
CS
1|8j
a
S
s
ft*
$92.1&5
-
111,790
«.
'
«A
•
83
s
2 .
s
^S
a
o
^
g^J
o
s
11
ea ■
3
«
5
o
23,386
49,780
170,122
613
85,607
6,565
$20,000
14
906
14,412
74,000
19,828
22,621
190,260
880
2,200
3,035
3,035
3,085
7,195
1,574
2,225
$8,100
2,204
88,100
a 49
& 1,305
20O
1,000
20,000
e 35,548
6 3,000
o
o
S
cm
m
9
$60,355
41,317
6,130
485
178
6,925
360,005
$622,781 $500,000 $68,782
300,000
66,326 25,000
361,739
766,253
2,900
166,809
200,000
500,000
1,890
75,000
18,667 1 1 5,000
921,778
7,589
743,789
620,900
5,000
500,000
190,484 {I 100,000
818,396
120,746
101,412
56,510
20,600
11,037
5,942
6,296
11,045
453,733
12,800
274,500
37,000
100,000
32,000
16,000
10,000
5,000
5,000
5,000
3(>0,000
10,000
4,500
17,841
04,671
2,551
982
91,772
9,725
278,235
767
104,232
54,501
(243,896
81,315
24,510
8,100
1,037
942
1,296
5,267
117,027
2,800
LlABIUTIBfl.
t
s
ft .
SO. o
$88,243
65,505
13,485
67,068
246,380
28
37
27,643
137,957
22,431
1,412
778
36,706
$15,756 j $622,781
360,005
56,326
361,739
17,822
3,942
1,822
1,600
6,983 29,000 190,484
30,000
766,253
2,900
166,809
18,667
921,778
7,589
743,789
318,896
120,746
101,^12
56,510
19,100
11,037
5,042
6,296
11,045
453,733
12,800
a FIztnrM. b Peraonal property. e Patterns, models and elevator account. d And mortgage bonds.
ANNUAL RETURNS OP CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cektificates of Condition
Rubber Compinji,
Chemical Piper Com-
s?.V
Cheetar Caopermllm
CreiBurr AuoelellOD,
Cheater Paper Com pur.
The, ....
Chealnut Bill Real Ba-
te I e AaaoolaUDa of
UerihoroDgb,
Chloopee Eleclrlo Ugtai
Chlsopm PellaBnlldlng
C'blael Edge Hut Loci
ling Coin-
lion, ¥ha,
Noi-
Utf U,
Uar- IM,
Ha; le,
May e.
Feb. 2«,
Ua; 13,
Feb- n,
H*r 9,
»100,«M
tI3,I»S
240,000
.
wm
"•■"
^fiv,
U.000
31,374
ib,m
8.000
10,100
.000
2,S00
u.m
»,000
26,000
3i,a)o
WfiV)
rn.MO
$00,000
10,000 I
2>,M)«
S
-
•t,»oo
• 11,233
380,000
•ss,«u
30,000
UfiW
41,314
0,000
IMM
10,444
ft 0,000
1,100
ifioo
MO
2,200
1300
«lth
R.K.
25,000
13.S00
8,000
1.021
1
(2»,ni I
wuh
R.E.
- ,
-
400,000
8,700
S00,0QO
10,600
1,000
2MH
t And plant, lliwa and Itaipt.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
91
of Corporations — Continued.
AUITS — Coo.
•oi
*• 1
3-5
J
•
p
S
Profl
•a.
^2« .
**
J
8-2
S
s
and
s
£
i
O
tSflJbM $17,000
116,064
41,M7 I 2,500
83,923
32,889
800
37,706
325
875,180
88,488
a$16»100
600,800
1,444
d 16,000
<250
/360
10,144
1,000
88,029
I
::&0 I 6,000
7,500
1
11,000
-
460
47,988
-
2,100
-
7,900
iT.0O0
360
625
Liabilities.
•a
OEl
O
$9,414
1,407
79
622
$167,629
647,666
204,404
128.980
136,985
16,000
10,087
4,876
182,023
25,000
31,816
43,762
1,938,600
57,466
63,998
9,630
28,376
11.993
6,026
82.807
41,489
Capital
Q
$100,000
$67,629
t
9
i
o
P .
£j
5|
O
*"3
8h5
1%
Balan
and
|1
1"
1
250,000
287,872
90,000 86,864
26,000 88,856
60,000
15.000
6,000
8,125
75,000
26,000
10,000
12,000
1,000,000
30,000
20,000
8,380
26,000
8,600
6,000
10,000
11,000
73,231
10,087
1,250
65^
11,396
16.641
468,126
17.208
10.081
800
360
2,847
26
61,836
13,873
$18,328
c 20,074
98,683
$19,684
$90,000
14,212
12,764
$167,629
647,666
204,404
128,980
186,985
15,000
- I 16,087
46,466
9,920
6,121
368,786 I
450
3,016
846
1,431
6,616
10,000
10,000
AlOO.OOO)
a8,096i
10,248
23,917
9,540
11,000
4,376
182,023
25,000
81,316
43.762
1,938,690
67,466
63,998
9,630
28,376
11,993
6,026
82,807
41,489
a One bmidred and alztyone shares company's stock.
c SnrplQs. d Water rights, water pipes and bydranU.
* Tools, barrows, etc. / Cans, boxes, tubs. etc.
h Reserve for guaranty. i Reserve from sale of land.
h Trustee aoeonnt.
g Reserve for renewals.
) Good wUl.
92
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Cokdition
•
OS
o
•
•rf
bo
cS
g
o
•04
NAME OF CORPO-
1
RATION.
S
a 9
•5
OS
citizen Publlahing Com-
pany, . . . .
Cltisens* Building Com-
pany
1894.
June 28
Jan. 13
Cltlzena' Oaa Light Com
pany of Quiney, . . Aug. 7
City Job Print Company,
The July 17
City Manufacturing Cor-
poration, . Feb. 26
City Mills Company, . Feb. 27
Claflin and Kimball —
Incorporated, . . June 4
Clarendon Mills, . . Feb. 9
Clark and Chapman BCa-
chine Company, . ^. May 16
Clark-Hutchinson Com-
pany, .... Mar. 10
Clark Sawyer Company,
The Sept. IS
Clark's Cove G-uano Com-
pany, .... Oct. 4
Clement Manufacturing I
Company, . . '
. I Sept. 7
Climax Manufacturing !
Company, The, . . • Jan. 8
Clinton Oas Light Com-
pany, . . . .
Clinton Market Com-
pany, . . . .
Clinton Printing Com-
pany, The, .
Clinton Wire Cloth Com-
pany, . . . .
Coatee Clipper Manu-
facturing Company, .
Cobb Stove and Machine
Company, .
Cobum and Taylor Man-
ufacturing Company, .
Cobum Manufacturing
Company, .
Coburn Stationery Com-
pany, . . . .
Feb. 21
May 7
July 10
Nov. 5
Nov. 23
Feb. 27
Dec. 7
Feb. 14
June 21
1894.
Jan. 8,
Jan. 2,
July 19,
Feb. 16,
Feb. 1,
Jan. 29,
Apr. 17,
Feb. 7, ,
May 9.
Feb. 14,
Mar. 6,
Aug. 16,
July 9,
1893.
Nov. 10,
1894.
Feb. 14,
1893.
Jan. 17,
1894.
May 22,
Aug. SO,
c July 28,
Jan. 17,
Aug. 31,
Jan. 1,
c May 21,
P
0 o
O I;
la
ASBBTB.
m
&
«
•1
^u
«>
•o ^
m
O o
6»
«£
0
•a ».
a «
2
OT4
«•*
S
•J
0Q
m
*»
.o .
e o
•
Q2
fl •r*
M
■s
15
^
O
$6,000
9,980 1 1 $18,000
33,000
1,200
9,600
760,000 ,| 160,197
96,000 I 43,614
100,000
$6,000
with
19,732
with
with
- I
50,000
100,000
30,000 !
100,000
100,000
800,000 262,377 i with
I
I r
32.000 |i 28,401
60,000
7S,000 137,000
200,000
6,000
400,000
I
I
16,000 I
26,000 ;
6.000
70,000
12,000
447,000
6248.276
16,024
60,000
with
with
$18,000
R.B.
149,466
R. B.
real
R. B.
R.E.
real
$5,030
2,000
a 61,663
860
660,406
37,600
estate
4,750 '
- !
28,697
160
9,680
2,000
estate
8,880
1,916
6,604
$2,853
244
2,840
139
70,305
168»203
76,172
871
164,414
132,980
217,646
6,616
401
2,S»
800
412,673
2,362
6,063
624
4,633
a Street mains, etc.
h And $100,813.10 additional, insurance claims.
c Adjourned.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
93
o/ Corporationt — Continued.
AMETa— Con.
a
s
•
■
5
1.
9
S
S'S
3
2"
o
Ltabiutibs.
•
M
1
*
m
i
•
Balance Profit
and LoM.
Reeerve for De-
preciation.
•
$6,000
•8.814
-
-
-
$14,814
9,080
10,000
-
$264
-
20,244
88,000
38,410
|a5,000
-
-
-
76,410
1,200
-
-
50
-
1,260
750,000
899,682
-
6,155
-
1,155,837
96,000
72.000
-
90,728
$40,000
298,723
50,000
89,609
-
8,845
-
143,544
100,000
2,818
$72,959
with
reserves
175,772
80,000
-
-
-
-
30,000
100,000
276,329
6 5,353
-
5,000
886,682
100,000
46,889
•
781
-
147,020
747,100
87,645
-
-
-
834,746
32,000
45,747
-
30,494
-
108,241
50,000
-
-
-
-
60,000
73,000
74,000
-
7.860
-
154,860
200,000
110,000
-
-
-
310,000
5,300
2,438
-
-
-
7.738
400,000
160,681
-
226,798
20,000
j (232,626
839,965
15,000
9,207
-
2,892
6,704
33,863
25,000
f, 6,766
^/6,000
1
S
-
-
37,766
6,000
84
-
940
-
7,024
70,000
-
-
-
-
70,000
1S,000
4,525
-
255
-
16,780
o Qoeationable clalmB.
d Reserve for fire inaarance.
b Bnrploe.
€ Patterns and flasks.
c Fixtures.
/ Mortgage.
ANNUAL RETDRNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
AbetTaa of CERnFICATES OF Condition
I.
i
Lothar CompaDj,
OonaDlsat UMIi, .
OODaDlcnt Mllli (2d g
CooaDt Bros. & Bngg
Co
(JoDRDt HdMI Campuy,
D«B. it,
Og(. SI,
On, 21.
on. SO.
Jao. Ti,
Uar. 6,
»,D(»
(io.m
.,«'™
-
R.Z.
J8,B»
«W.000
with
»a1
wUU
*JM
•MO
»1,7M
800
/JMI3
180,«»
00.000
100.000
140,000
-
1B.440
ia,,wt
IMTO
W4.6M
4M,1U
a.000
-
MS.MI
4I7,BM
with
R.K.
ijo
-
K«.007
S7.aw
«^
9.080
ii,m
HI.MS
40,!0»
O.0W
3i.m
1K.H2
14.000
.»
R. B.
400
*)Q,000
with
r-1
-u»
d RImMc Hoh.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
95
of Corporations — Continued.
Assets —
Con.
1
1
Reserves. t* ,
Balance Profit 5
and Loss.
1
Reser\'e for De-
preciation.
Manufactures,
Materials and
Btook in Proc-
osa.
Patent RlgbU.
•
•
2
1
8
•
i
Balance Profit
and Loss.
1 ^
CaplUl Stock.
DebU.
Total.
$14,aB9
.
.
-
$U.326
$25,000
1
$1,277
-.
I
1
I $18,048
-
$44,325
158,097
-
•4,176
-
408,020
350,000
53,020
-
-
-
403,020
45p412
$12,308
89,140
-
165,422
100,000
4,126
a $1,246
50,051
$10,000
165,422
40.»5
10,700
0,090
-
183,251
100,000
2.862
a 1,245
19,144
10.000
133,251
1T8;»0
-
-
-
040,176
600,000
324.049
-
16,127
-
040,176
228
—
-
-
40,206
80,000
611.600
«■
2,906
1.800
46,206
1,200
-
-
79,607
30.100
43,066
-
6,631
1
79,607
87,1«
-
-
-
505,715
300,000
11,016
-
104,699
-
505,715
70,182
-
-
-
135.748
25,000
42.765
30,000
37,983
-
136.748
305,U1
-
-
-
1,222,511
760,000
406,715
-
66,706
-
1,222,511
812
-
150
$10,105
18.162
15.500
2,662
-
-
-
18,162
-
-
-
-
260,088
220,000
36.000
-
-
4,088
260.088
-
-
-
-
419,000
408,000
11,000
-
-
-
410,000
-
-
-
8,429
11,656
8,000
3,656
-
-
-
11,656
-
-
12,000
6,945
25,647
17.000
8,647
-
-
-
26,647
187,060
-
-
-
782,225
350,000
430.155
-
2,070
-
782,225
108,2M
-
■
-
270,208
110,600
89,921
-
60.682
-
270,208
84,883
-
-
-
277,347
110,600
102,229
-
55.518
-
277,347
11,415
-
-
-
61,549
48,000
18,379
-
-
170
61,640
1
-
c900
3,745
18,656
12.000
6,656
-
-
-
18.666
1
OOO {
1
350
-
11,216
6,000
2,661
-
2,554
-
11,215
1
W.871 :
1
-
-
407,081
150,000
254,794
-
02,287
-
497,081
a Surplus.
b Bonds.
c Treasury stock.
96
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
s
'Sg
^.
<sl
s
• 8
4
«a
1
•gfr
?
o
S
|5
as
o
ll
S
Q
1
Conoeoticiit Steam Stone
Company, The, .
Consolidation Steamboat
Company, The, .
Consolidation Steamboat
Company, The (2d re-
tnnij, . . • .
Constitution Wharf Com-
pany, • • • .
Conveyancers Title In-
snrance Company,
Conway Co-operative
Creamery of Conway,
AlLass*, • • • •
Co-operative Store Com-
pany, The, .
OordaviUe Woolen Com-
pany, • • . •
Cordis Mills, .
Corey Leather Company,
Cor win Wilde Co., The,
Cotocheset Company, .
CotUge City Gas and
Electric Light Com-
pany, The, .
Cottage City Water
Company, .
Courier Publishing Com-
pany, ....
Cowell and Hall Manu-
facturing Company,
The, ....
Craig ft Richards Gran-
ite Company, The,
Craighead & Eintz Com-
pany, . . . .
Criterion Knitting Com-
pany, . . • .
Crocker Harness Com-
pany, . . . •
Crocker Manufacturing
Company, .
Crompton Loom Works,
1894.
Apr. 25,
Feb. 14,
Dec. 11,
Jan. 25,
Feb. 2,
Feb. 8,
May 1,
Feb. 23,
Mar. 6,
Dec. 24,
May 12,
Aug. 8,
Aug. 14,
Nov. 21,
Aug. 6,
June 28,
May
28.
Mar.
w,
Apr.
25,
Feb.
16,
May
11,
Feb.
17.
1894.
Feb. 8,
1893.
Oct. 7,
1894.
Oct. 4,
Jan. 22,
Jan. 8,
Jan. 26,
Apr. 23,
Jan. 25,
Feb. IS,
c Nov. 24,
Jan. 23,
July 14.
June 27,
Aug. 1,
July 19,
Jan. 10,
Apr. 20,
Feb. 24,
« Apr. 13,
Jan. 17,
May 9,
Feb. 6,
$10,000
11,500
11.600
400,000
200,000
8,500
2,000
50,000
120,000
50,000
20,000
30,000
25,000
80,000
8,800
16,000
20,000
250,000
10,000
77,000
100,000
550,000
Assets.
2
i3
«i
^.•
•
^1
i
*£
S
a
•o ».
•o
JB
J*
"S
o
s
a
$400/)00
4,874
27,000
18,500
30,350
5,000
142,876
5,000
87,708
10,000
11,468
200,000
128,869
.0 •
« e
•on
S «
O
-
-
$12,575
with
R.E.
^
$426
$3,940
1,250
with
R.B.
17,727
with
R.E.
20,000
-
-
d 1,135
with
real
esUte
-
-
13,000
with
real
estete
.
6,556
1.700
-
5,000
-
-
67,498
with
R. B.
13,600
with
R.B.
5,889
with
real
estate
with
R.E.
66,472
$1,821
150
02,722
17,817 )
al76.00O \
635.000)
2,280
2,154
43,367
106,275
74,084
23,800
1,102
1,965
6,489
18,665
41,SB3
76,161
500
8,782
58,626
250,890
a Mortgages.
d Furniture and fixtures.
b Bank stocks.
c Statement of Oct. 31, 1804.
0 Adjourned.
1894."1
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
97
of GorpwaJtions — Continued.
■ So
« ■ la
a —
w 0 a
12,000
1,171
1,400
25,358
24,086
00,370
1,143
2,M1
26,801
65,075
AB8IT8 — Con.
.•
•
s
•
9
S
Proft
BB.
1
83
fl
o
5*0
5
**
J59
«8
•S
« *
Oi
!^
«
43.342
-
-
$1
-
800
-
-
$^.278
i,4n
•
M08
-
/1.251
-
-
-
13,6M
4,500
01,603
"•'•« ImIm! ^^
- I 1,120
87,803 I
229,547 i $40,000
0,055
B.lnP.
27.177
I
$16,106
450
650,000
228,817
10,561
8,722
118,462
170,661
174,580
28,800
80,360
83,850
144,881
5,480
83,027
82,684
Liabilities.
2
O
I
•Ss
^ s
S
$10,000
11,500
11,500
400,000
200,000
3,500
1,860
50,000
120,000
50,000
16,000
80,000 j
25,000
80,000
6,800
16,000
20,000
$5,606
200
200
150,000
338.735 I 250,000
77,766
10,000
102,713 77,000
I
|:
346,420 100.000
I I
I
715,608 ,, 550,000
3,680
ClOl
80,307
704
122,365
6,706
i 18,000
1,016
2,122
j 64,602
2,000
17,027
63,404
84,022
48,740
26,713
131,603
60,881
d$152
$500
27,047
8,622
408
21,072 j
5,343
A 2,224
1,088
a $870
1,211
7,583/
tf 3,500)
^44,604
6,649
0,190
4,713
4,600
14,517
114,736
o
$16,196
11,700
11,700
660,000
228,317
10,661
3,722
113,452
170.651
174,680
20,706
40,916
83,859
144,831
8,800
33,927
82,684
338,735
77,766
102,713
346,429
{ 715,598
a MlteellAneoiis. h FlztureB. c DivideodB nnpaid. d Bdacational fond.
« BeMire for depredation of bollera, etc. / Tax acconnt. g Guaranty and renovation.
A Balance nadlTided proftta. i Mortgage. ) Bonds, unpaid notes and billa.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
■a
Asnra.
h
a*
Si
1=
1
1
1
Croiby 8 tenia Oige »nd
,Sfi,.
aJauais,
(100,000
•70,JM
tl2,4U
£(81,818
(48,101
(18,828
CrMonD Boi Coaipsny,
Jan. 11,
Jan. 8,
Hfiod
-
c 10.030
IVIT
CriiUl Kmaiy Whsel
Compuzy, Tie. . .
Ang. T,
M.y IB.
30.000
-
8.600
4,867
"'ffi.sr""'""'.
Jan. a»,
1883.
dOci.aB.
li,000
2,396
,nb
R. E.
I.T47
1,102
Cry>l8l Ullli Con.p»Dy,
July SI.
eOrt. 28,
i/M
2,3»4
with
R.K.
1,818
T»0
CryiUiapringBlenohlDg
sod DyalDg Company,
Mar. fl.
IBM.
Feb. 98,
100,000
06,U>0
00,600
11,14.
Comni'.ngtOD Coopor*-
tin Cf e»m«y AwhI.
bUod, Tbe, .
Ool. 8,
Sept. 31.
2,500
3,336
uo
3,086
603
S,8««
Compiiny, .
Mar. 18.
Fob. 1!,
100,000
16,000
»4,4T8
Currier Telephone BoLl
(;oiiipBny, The, .
Mar. B.
Jan. 26.
w),ooo
»0
^oo2
CurlLind Pope Lumber
Apr. 17,
Jan. 17.
140,000
4S,900
8,000
.
138.SW)
Compmy, .
Feb. IB,
Jan. •.
100.000
104.000
M.MO
«^
82.000
28,110
Cntlet Compiny, The, .
Fab. 0.
Jan. 16,
100.O00
»,017
-111
R.R.
17,488
61.043
CollerLyomnod Flew,
Feb. 12,
Jan. II,
80,000
22,821
.U
B.E.
34,561
81,838
Cottar Tower Company.
May 31,
Maya.
M.000
33,111
D.A.KKtooCDinpuir,.
May 8,
Apt. 11,
7,000
1,020
D.&L. Blade Compsoy,
Feb. II,
Jan. 10,
100,000
40,500
-
2a,en
D.D.WhlUBhooCom-
Aug. n.
July 10,
20,000
6,423
10,6T3
4,640
D. OlrDuard Company,
TUB
Feb, 2T,
Feb. fl.
12,000
1,600
11,87*
D. B. Brtgbam Com-
P"r. Th
May *.
Mar. 11,
M.OOO
-
-
-
BOB
D. L. Page CoiDpany, .
May 11.
Apr. 18,
11,000
/10,*46
>,«H
Compooy, The, .
eapLM,
Sept. 17,
100,000
100,000
«U,
R.E.
60,000
3M80
D.S.McDooalilCompaDy
Dee. 4.
Sepl. *,
116,000
,126,»2
»llh
real
eataio
4,8*3
D. 8. Qulrfc Company,
^Th.
5,000
6,000
-
-
-
T,»0
8,181
K^ly Ne«. Company,
Ang. S,
I8M.
June 18,
6.K8
Daily Nen-i 1'uWl.hing '
Company, The, . . llay IB,
May I,
16,«0
8.000
-
-
*jm
f Tcwta and Hiturea.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
99
of Corporations — Continued.
ABBST8~Con.
LlABILITIBS.
Manufacturea,
Materlala and
Stock In Proc
eaa.
•
t
1
•
•
9
s
1
3
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
Total.
1
Capital Stock.
•
•
1
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
Reaerve for De-
preciation.
•
3
$100,541
$7,605
$12,234
$329,162
$100,000
$15,085
.
$214,077
_
$320,162
9,022
-
-
-
35,769
24,000
9,557
-
2,212
-
35,769
5,907
3,000
-
$17,290
87,644
26,500
11,144
-
-
37,644
M77
-
-
608
7,829
5,000
2,329
-
-
-
7,329
407
-
a 51
1.339
6,800
5,000
1,800
-
"
-
6.800
25,nS2
^
1,130
172,106
77,708
61,234
-
15,622
$17,542
•
172,106
-
393
-
8,197
2,500
8,335
-
1,862
500
8,197
2S,000
4,000
4,202
69,994
145,675
100,000
46,675
-
-
145.675
^800
899,500
-
-
406,302
400,000
-
-
6,392
-
406,302
126,885
-
3,059
-
814,574
140,000
174,574
-
-
-
814,574
80,142
-
-
-
250,252
100,000 j
c 142,364
160
-
-
-
242,514
68,645
-
4,080
-
180,248
100,000
72,267
-
-
7,981
180,248
20,710
-
1,127
1,889
142,540
90,000
52,540
-
-
-
142,540
18,209
26,003
-
-
78.403
20,000
58,403
-
-
-
78,403
8,472
-
2,700
-
7,192
7,000
-
-
192
-
7,192
34,268
-
19,048
-
122.497
100,000
22,497
-
-
-'
122,497
3,501
-
132
1,722
25,891
20,000
5,891
-
-
-
25,801
1,616
-
-
-
15,022
12,000
2,754
-
59
209
15.022
45,149
-
a 3,416
. 2,064
51,527
50,000
1,527
-
-
-
51,527
2,000
-
-
22,059
12,000
1,483
-
8,566
-
22,059
126,206
-
-
-
301,386
100,000
41,136
-
60,250
100,000
301,386
4,540
1,300
-
136,185
115,000
8,913
-
9,272
3,000
136,185
-
-
15,743
1,065
24,005
5,000
19,095
-
-
24,095
495
-
-
-
14,071
5,000
2,842
-
6,729
-
14,071
906
-
d 10,000
2,950
26,458
15,000
11,458
-
-
-
26,458
a Fixtures.
b Bella.
c To its treaaurer.
d Leaae of machinery.
100
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Comditiok
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
5
8
«a
«
a 9
a
9
O
o
9
*•>
-So
-I
A88KT8.
I
Dalton IngeraoU Com-
pftDy, . . . ■
Dalton Shoe Co., .
Dalzell Axle Company
(for 1893), .
Dalzell Axle Company,
Damon Brick Company,
Damon Bafe and Iron
Works Company,
The, « • « • •
Dana Hardware Com-
pany, . . • .
DanleU Cornell Com-
pany, The, .
Dan vers Co-operative
Aasociation,
Dan vers Co-operative
Union Society, •
Danvers G-as Light Com-
pany, ■ . ■ .
Danvers port Rubber
Company, The, .
Dart Express Company,
Davis and Fnrber Ma-
chine Company, .
Davis and McLane Man-
nfactaring Company, .
Davis Chapln Company,
The, . . . •
Davis Coast Wrecking
Corporation,
Davis Company, The, .
Davis Sulphur Ore Com-
pany, . . . .
Davol Mills, .
Day and Jobson Com-
pany. The, .
Deane Steam Pump
Company, The, .
1884.
Mar. 2,
Sept. 7,
Jan. 9,
Oct. 18,
Apr. 27,
Apr. 2,
Oct. 25,
Mar. 24,
Apr. 4,
Mar. 9,
Jan. 20,
Aug. 10,
Sept. 24,
Feb. 9,
Jan. 19,
Jan. 16,
June 16,
Apr. 24,
Apr. 24,
June 19,
Feb. 20,
Feb. 14,
1894.
Feb. 6,
Aag. 6,
1893.
Oct. 7,
1894.
Oct. 6,
Jan. 10,
Feb. 26,
Sept. 20,
Jan. 20,
Jan. 10,
Jan. 90,
Jan. 8,
July 9,
Aug. S3,
6 Jan. 24,
Jan. 15,
Jan. 1,
May 28,
Jan. 15,
Jan. 30,
May 7,
Jan. 1,
Jan. 25,
$125,000
50,000
80,000
30,000
80,000
37,500
150,000
75,000
2,600
5,500
20,000
10,000
10,000
400,000
10,000
11,000
50,000
50,000
15,000
400,000
24,000
300,000
$36,845
10,000
10,000
15,758
S,820
^
go
g«
a
n
«
s
$6,500
2,000
2,000
11,950
21,788
with
9,216
with
112,736
with
7,000
with
41,607
with
•
120,SOO
24,200
93.168
with
$30;M5
8,000
8,000
8,808
6,800
with R. E.
real
real
R.E.
R.E.
real
96.000
a $7,000
88,821
10,000
10,000
11,836
80,981
estate
estate
66,000
c 7,547
58,486
estate
285,100
R.E.
95,162
8(4
$Ti,oe2
190,833
28,099
30,728
7,608
76,1«2
78,722
186,218
2.415
1.8M
1,389
6,257
1,880
328,4tt
4.296
17,470
10.211
7,141
89,422
76,802
34,616
189,621
a And tools.
b Adjourned.
c And merchandise.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
101
o/ Corporations — CoDtiDued.
A88XT0— Cod.
O ■ fa
I
S
p
8
I
I
3
8 .
S
o
$101,487
86;ho
8,000
8,000
8,800
70,887
144,301
00,820
M18
S,280
88,060
4,883
iOO
13,900
12,008
U4,S10
31,482
168,026
$15,000
a $8,500
63,669
i -
-
3,032
-
8,000
62,000
-
-
6,684
-
-
e66
-
-
) d78
i«1^2
$i,»w
-
462
-
-
10,000
-
-
6,600
-
-
200
-
-
784
-
-
900
8,802
-
94,700
-
-
-
-
$206,608
232,868
66,099
68,728
46,934
281.330
223,023
289,972
4,298
7,649
24,019
18,758
11,890
694,264
26,848
22,608
69,931
72,410
61,490
691,112
66,078
496,966
Lt4BIUTIE8.
o
B
QQ
3
5
«
t
«4
s
o
o
"a*
m
u a
3
$126,000
50,000
30,000
80,000
30,000
37,600
160,000
76,000
2,600
6,600 j
20,000
10,000 j
10,000
400,000
10,000
11,000
60,000
60,000
16,000
400,000
24,000
300,000
$76,639
.
$6,060
176,561
-
6,807
20,800
^
6,299
21,714
-
7,014
12,831
-
4,103
126,167
-
62,628
61,482
-
-
169,972
-
-
66
-
998
1,081
/ 1,018
-
-
1,047
-
2,972
8,690
^5,000
.
63
1,686
-
-
18,668
-
160,706
16,343
-
-
11,608
-
-
4,268
-
16,668
22,410
-
-
26,987
-
9,668
278,668
-
17,644
84,207
-
7,871
181.864
-
64,002
$6,160
8,691
6,000
760
306
A 10,000
< 6,000
$206,606
282,868
66,009
68,728
46,934
231,'330
228,028
289,972
4,298
7,640
24,019
18,768
11,890
j 694,264
26,343
82,608
60,981
72,410
61,490
691,112
66,078
406,966
a FlztnrM. h Pattoros.
d Foniltar* aod flzinrM. e 122 ftharM capital stock.
g M oilfags oo mllL h BmI eatato.
e One ehare capital stock.
/ Mortgage and accrned Interest.
< Tools.
102
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates or Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
a
^
s
M
1
a
1
?-s
o
1^
5
as
Dedham and Hyde Park
Gas and Electric Light
Company, .
Dedham Lumber Com-
pany, . . . .
Dedham Water Com-
pany, . . . .
Deniaon Brothers Com-
pany, • . • •
DenniiOQ Manufacta ring
Company, . •
Dennlaport Flahing
Company, .
Derby, Kilmer & Pond
Desk Co
Dickinson Hard Rubber
Company, .
Dighton Furnace Com-
pany, • • « .
Dighton Manufacturing
Company, .
net
Cc
\lgh\
Coi
Dighton Stove Lining
>mpany, • ■
Donahoe*a Magazine
Company, .
Dorchester Gaa Light
Company, .
Dorchester Hygeia Ice
Company, . •
Dover Stamping Com-
pany, . . . .
Drainage Construction
Company, . • •
Draper Brothers Com-
pany, . . • .
Draper Machine Tool
Company, .
Drapery fixture and
Wood Carving Com-
pany, . . . .
Dresser Manufacturing
Company, .
DriscoU and Baton Man-
ufacturing Company, .
1894.
Jan. 13,
1894.
Jan. 10,
June 16,
May 29,
June 11,
Jan. 8,
Apr. 28,
Mar. 27,
Apr. 12,
Apr. 10,
Jan. 10,
1893.
Dec. 21,
Nov. 3,
1894.
July 16,
Mar. 16,
Jan. 10,
May 17,
Feb. 21,
Mar. 20,
Mar. 1,
Mar. 22,
Jan. 10,
June 12,
Apr. 4,
Mar. 9,
Feb. 7,
Dee. S,
Oct. 30,
Apr. 25,
Jan. 27,
Oct 4,
July 26,
Mar. 6,
Feb. 6,
June 19,
May 28,
Mar. 9,
Feb. 13,
July 27,
July 10,
Deo. 29,
^Nov. 6,
$100,000
8,000
100,000
100,000
1,000,000
60,000
160.000
40,000
70,000
18.000
25,000
S5,0Q0
400,000
60,000
800,000
20,000
200,000
60,000
10,000
86,000
86,900
I
$7,666
18,900
90,000
216,468
1,000
14.817
41,600
17,000
660,368
19,280
116,682
20,000
5,000
Absbt*.
^
S o
5
J
ft
a
2
0
9
a
2
with
$^900
with
60,917
8,985
with
with
c 6,996
with
1,000
a $500
12,000
R.B.
R.B.
real
12,234
-1
R.B.
11,800
4,000
$37,318
-)
106,672
18,076
84,187
9,000
2,500
estate
81,271
(f 6,469 i
« 84,884 {
16,667
19,068
4,176
h 10,686
8 g
$2,067
ft 2,184*
10,660 {
2,418
61,166
417,
183
58.660
18,315
2A,M9
10,616
0.716
18,U8
25,252
6.464
/l]a,808
20,961
170,290
7,688
188
S5,7»
a On leased land. b Mortgages on real estate. e Artesian wells. d And tools.
e And dies. / Including shares of stock. g Adjourned. A Lasts, patterns, diet, els.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
103
of Corporations — Continaed.
A88KT8 — Oon.
Liabujtixs.
11-
llli
•
S
1
•
m
a
i
S4
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
•
1
•
3
1
•
1
•
i
Balance Profit
and LoM.
Beaerve for De-
predation.
e
1
•1.758
^
•4.T27
•66,094
•109,209
•100,000
•0,209
-
-
•109,209
15,021
-
( 02,200
} 5163
-
80,667
8,000
22,223
-
•344
-
80,667
-
-
c 182,802
•
208,620
100,000
100,000
-
3,620
-
208,620
6^283
-
2,008
-
219,899
100,000
116,064
-
1,226
•2,110
210,899
694,087
-
-
-
1,272,826
1,000,000
261,686
-
21.190
-
1,272,826
-
-!
d 10,600
6,724
{28,800
62,749
60,000
2,749
-
-
-
62,749
82,848
"
6,670
-
221,070
160,000
28,798
•42,272
-
-
221,070
17,9U
"
-
-
80,284
40.000
28,956
-
6,378
10,000
80,284
86,440
-
10,042
87,048
166,686
70,000
95,685
-
-
-
166,686
-
-
-
-
19,600
18,000
1,600
-
-
-
10,600
18,272
-
8,010
-
46,104
26,000
18,814
-
2,790
-
46,104
« 20,000
-
-
-
88,163
81,000
6,300
-
-
-
86,800
3,770
-
146
-
680,641
400,000
18,042
-
175,599
-
680.641
/
-
7,760
0,290
70,011
00,000
10,011
-
-
-
70,011
127,094
•*,ooo
10,880
-
468.162
300,000
146,262
-
-
21,900
468,152
•
14.471
.
28,427
63,849
20,000
48.849
-
-
-
68,840
06,800
-
-
-
281,667
200,000
36,681
-
46,026
C with
I bal.
<P.&L.
\ 281,66T
90,660
-
2,800
6,120
67,877
60,000
7,8n
-
-
-
67,877
4,449
2,000
-
6,803
17,997
10,000
7,997
-
-
-
17.997
-
-
-
-
6,188
0
-
-
188
-
188
8,708
-
11,882
66,960
80,900
20,060
-
-
-
66,960
a Teama. h Intereat and inaarance paid in advance. c Plant. d Three veMela.
t Pnhlleatlon Donahoe*a Magazine. /Not figured, g Paid back ; no buslneae except renting honaea.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cedtificateb op Conditioii
•100,000
.„.«.
wllh
1
X
u
H
P
Driren Unton let Com-
PUT.Th
lau.
lau.
Apr. a.
real
.MMe
H4.20T
I>1idt<TFHdmil.Goni.
P"/. Th
y>r. le,
9 Bier. 13,
20.000
68,107
DndUr Ulll>, . . .
Oet. »1,
>Oct.S4,
100,000
00.008
wUb
re*l
eeuu
i.Tn
Dddmui » Ooodall Co., .
Ap'. »,
Mer. 91.
48,000
11,811
DDDaa Latbet Uinn.
hetoriog OompMj, .
July ii,
MV 8,
IIKVWO
.
•8.000
•1,000
110,«U
DauDB Lviwam BurnD,
The, ... .
Oet. ».
Feb. 14,
1,000
800
DD[«al TooDi OptliKl
AOB. S,
Joly 10,
18,000
•100
T,UO
10,«7«
DnriMldlli. . . .
KoT. M,
Out. as.
800,000
«s,ooo
108.000
176,000
400,000
100,401
D
oMbsr Tempi. Con-
Feb. U,
Jan. n.
100,000
1,100.000
88,100
1,000,000
with
800.000
B. B.
800,000
10,000
17,044
itIbM UuafisIariDg
OompmEj. . . .
Joir ».
Jol, »,
«I,S01
rkce Compmnf , The, .
J.O. JO,
Jen. 1,
ao.ooo
.
.
4,888
A. Whltoef Com-
P"!
June 18,
oM»r. a.
86,000
-1
M,>IT 1
».14<!
ud A. H. Bileballai-
Compiny. . . .
Jmi. 10,
Jw. 3,
800,000
48,000
Kith
B.K.
80,707
141 .070
ADtbon; h SoDii Td-
Ju. S»,
Ju. W,
80,000
8I,«6
M.1S0
B. Horn Compinj,
The
M.r.M.
Mer. 24,
18,000
-
io.aa
B. Tlakhim Bhoc
Oompinj. . . .
Jnn.ai,
Her. 17,
10,000
2A00
T,«n
D. Jone* aod Bom
Oompuir, . . .
Jane 4,
Si.y 80,
80,000
88,000
0.000
"■™
a. Hlgglni Co ,
M.J 8.
Feb. S7,
20.000
-
-
-
81.488
e. CUpp Bnbber
Compuir, .
Ja»U,
Jane IS.
200.000
M.TOT
T,000
21.107
S8,l»8
88.000
Com "'^"'^ ''^
M.r !1,
Jm>. as.
tfioo
1,000
4.U0
HoHiTd Witob ind
ClMk Comp«n J, The,
Feb. *T,
Feb. K.
800,000
T»,BTO
OT.048
148,408
nrtng Compmny, The, .
D.e.M,
Dee. t.
200.000
84.000
41,101
IBJM
Feb. T,
Ju. IT.
80,000
M.808
4,000
18,8«
M.780
S4,84a
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
105
of CorporatUmt — Continned.
AsBBTB—Con.
Liabilities.
-"So
5 IB O 9
Patent RighU.
•
m
a
OS
3
1
Balance Profit
and Lose.
•
a
o
•
M
1
3
t
•
1
•
1
Balance Profit
and Lon.
Referre for De-
predation.
■
1
a$13»032
-
2)$37,500
$4,101
$209,830
$100,000
$109,830
-
-
$200,880
4,834
-
c 2,000
(18,000
j
70,131
20,000
87,027
-
$13,104
-
70,131
30,675
-
-
16,949
150,009
100,000
50,000
-
-
-
150,009
43,704
-
-
-
55,022
45,000
9,231
-
-
$791
65,022
169,861
-
-
290,474
100,000
183,067
-
7.407
-
290,474
-
-
700
-
1,200
1,000
100
-
100
-
1,200
7,816
-
4,063
-
29,997
14,000
8,074
-
2,923
5,000
29,997
138.758
-
« 110,951
4,500
1,228,611
500,000
-
/$716,111
12,600
-
1.228,611
22,481
$5,000
-
-
118,528
100,000
13,492
-
-
-
118,492
419,820
-
-
-
2,113,121
1,200,000
42,000
-
871,121
-
2,113,121
22,874
-
-
-
27,212
20,000
6,649
-
568
-
27,212
34,307
-
-
-
04,460
35,000
24,209
-
5,261
-
64,460
244,335
-
-
-
461,112
300,000
78,948
-
82,164
-
461,112
2,n5
-
( a3,187
(A9,800
i -
65,656
50,000
10,233
~
6,423
-
65,656
10,050
-
-
-
21,772
18,000
8,292
-
-
480
21.772
2,635
-
-
8,825
16,327
10,000
6,827
-
-
-
16,827
15,818
-
5,000
-
98,744
60,000
86,204
-
2,540
-
98,744
22,513
-
2,008
-
58.994
20,000
38,682
-
312
-
58,994
68,243
-
-
-
221,155
200,000
1,025
-
20,130
-
221,156
8,400
-
-
-
13,900
9,000
1,900
-
2,500
600
18,900
3n,«7
-
-
712.833
827,500
288,686
-
101,647
-
712.833
194,068
-
2,888
-
414,340
200,000
131,882
-
62,594
20,864
414,840
65,404
-
< 7,768
-
158,153
5<>,000
71,356
-
36,797
-
158,168
o And Ice tools. b Teams Included. c Horses, wagons, etc. d Side track privileges.
€ No. 2 weave alied, engine No. 1, Improvements No. 1. / Surplus.
g FttrnlBhlPfS. h Type, etc. i Patterns.
106
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894,
Abiftract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
it
o
B.T.Cowdrey Company,
B. W. Noyes Oompaay,
The, . . . .
Eagle Cotton Gin Com-
pany
Eagle Mill Company, .
Eagle PnblUhlng Com-
pany, The, . .
East Boston Company, .
East Boston Dry Dock
Company, .
East Boston Gas Com-
pany, . . . .
East Cambridge Land
Company, .
East MonnUin Water
Company, . .
Eastbampton Gas Com-
pany, . . . .
Eastbampton Robber
Thread Company,
Eaton, May and Robbins
Paper Company,
•
E d e s ICannfacturlng
Company, .
Edison Electric Illumi-
nating Company of
Boston, The,
Edison Electric Illnmi-
n a ting Company of
Brockton, The, .
Edison Electric Ilinml-
n a ting Company of
Fall River, .
Edison Electric Illumi-
nating Company of
New Bedford, The, .
E d s o n BCanofactnring
Company, .
Educational Publishing
Company, The, .
Egremont Co-operative
Creamery Company,
The
a Out of Bute.
d Adjourned.
1894.
Jan. 22,
Oct.
12.
June
1.
BCar.
8.
May
21.
June 19,
Apr.
18.
Feb.
24,
Feb.
19.
Sept.
8,
July
28.
June 20,
May
1.
Mar.
1,
Apr.
23,
Apr.
9,
Deo.
6.
Oct.
4,
Feb.
17,
July
8.
Feb.
8.
1894.
Jan. 17,
June 4,
May 22,
cJan. 1,
Mar. 19,
May 7,
Mar. 6,
Jan. 24,
Jan. 10,
Aug. 14,
July 18,
June 19,
dMar.21,
Feb. 7,
Feb. 8,
Mar. 8,
Oct. 17,
1898.
Not. 3,
1894.
Feb. 6,
June 80,
I
Jan. 1,
$60,000
26,000
66,000 J
20,000
10,000
866,781
100,000
220,000
256,600
4,000
80,000
400,000
86,000
25,000
3,000,000
100,000
160.000
160,000
6,600
6,000
3.500
AaasTS.
^
ii
^
II
H
•fU
^
•a k
J*
a $10,000
21,800
796,811
100,000
229,067
11,786
66,000
18,800
6,601
711,149
62,670
29,209
1,600
I
3
m
a
S
-
-
$8,781
-
-
600
$1,600
6 $20,200
8,891
8,000
-
8,000
-
-
6,000
with
real
Citato
with
real
estate
182,800
-
-
600
11,286
26,989
-
-
66,000
-
-
17,066
1,760
4,761
8,702
272,235
488,914
843,441
16,883
86,787
e2,4M
17,209
12,000
113.719
« 9.669
/ 1,868
-
-
-
-
-
4,800
-
-
8,760
100
1,500
800
P
$24,408
T7S
SS,888
•
12;846
69,988
8,000
28,888
464
280
1,675
197,806
4,518
6,707
185,817
18»581
8,590
17,079
6,078
b And engine, boilers, etc.
s Motors.
c Should have been held; doing no basinees.
/Meters.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
107
of Corporations — Continued.
Assets— Con.
LlABILITIXS.
-"So
2 « p
«2oo •
•
-a
1
•
m
0
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
1
•
M
1
OQ
1
•
1
•
s
t
«
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
5
$35,218
-
$1,000
-
$69,857
$60,000
$18,910
-
$447
-
$09,357
15.915
-
a500
$12,878
30,560
25.000
5,560
-
-
-
30,660
M,400
-
-
-
178,983
56,000
21,288
-
101,696
-
178,983
-
-
-
-
6,000
20,000
6,400
-
-
-
26,400
1,068
-
-
-
19,438
10,000
3,803
-
1,586
64,546
-
19,438
-
-
-
-
866,244
865,781
c252)
d21li
-
-
-
866,244
-
-
-
52,000
160,000
100,000
0 60,000
-
-
fc
160,000
11,857
-
38,n8
-
808,055
220,000
826
-
87,229
-
308,055
-
-
-
125,4U
258,678
25^600
2,178
-
-
-
268,678
-
-
i,750
5,030
4,000
1,080
-
-
-
5,030
eii
-
-
-
41,011
30,000
5,000
-
6,011
-
41,0U
138,509
-
-
-
459,964
400,000
7,209
-
27,766
$26,000
459,964
18,243
-
7,181
4,618
68,840
35,000
33,840
-
-
-
68,840
9,984
-
-
-
25,874
25,000
-
-
874
-
25,874
74,818
/208,S75
1,274,947
462
8,383,304
2,075,800
^1.257,504
-
-
-
3,833,804
2,848
19,000
183,167
-
283,268
100,000 1
« 100,000
49,262
■-
-
88,996
288,268
4,801
-
-
-
167,736
188,360
15,042
-
18,334
167,786
•
17,000
.
-
•
88,870
6,600
2,082
-
29,000
1,297
88,879
8,000
-
250
-
21,078
5,000
15,042
-
1,036
-
21,078
-
-
100
1,000
8,500
3,500
1
-
-
-
-
8,500
a Fomltare and fiztnres.
d No. 5 dlTldend scrip.
b Undivided profits.
« Bonds. /License.
c Unpaid dividends.
g Including bonds.
108
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1H94.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
3
^
S
te
ot
a
o
«3
s
s
® .
^
^•8
o
«^
o
^^
"i
^
Q
Bleetric Cigar Company,
Electric Light and Power
Compaov of Abington
and Rockland, The, .
Electric Lustre Starch
Company, .
Elizabeth Poole MUla, .
BUlott Lamber Com-
pany, . • • •
Elliott Paper Box Com-
pany, • • • •
Ellis Foundry Company,
Emerson Manufacturing
Company, .
Emmons Loom Harness
Company, .
Empire Laundry Ma-
)hiD
ohinery Company,
log!
Company (corpora-
Engraver and Printer
apany i
Hon), The, .
Enterprise Publishing
Company, .
Essex Company, .
Essex County Building
Company, .
Essex Leather Company,
Essex Manufacturing
Company, . •
Essex Steam Mill Com-
pany, • . « .
Eureka Ruling and Bind-
ing Company,
ETenlng Gazette Com-
pany, The, .
Everett Cycle Company,
Everett Herald Publish-
ing Company,
Everett Mills, .
Everett Piano Company,
Everett Woolen Com-
pany, . . . .
1894.
Feb. 27
Oct. 17
June 25
Nov. 12,
Jan. 22
Feb. 10
Mar. 15
May 8
Mar. 8
May 8
Oct. 19
Apr. 7
May 81
May 9
Feb. 23
June 25
Aug. 24
Oct. 81
June 14
Nov. 27
Aug. 4,
June 7
Aug. 20
July 8
1894.
Feb. 5,
July 25,
June 12,
Oct. 80,
Jan. 8,
Jan. 15,
Mar. 8,
a Feb. 10,
Feb. 28,
Feb. 7,
Mar. 28,
Jan* 22,
May 29,
Apr. 2,
a Feb. 6,
May 15,
Apr. 25,
July 18,
Jan. 28,
Oct. 1,
b
June 6,
a Aug.20,
aJunell,
■Si
mm O
&^
$20,000
75,000
7,600
100,000
10,000
10,000
15,000
225,000
40,000
10,000
5,000
10,000
500,000
170,000
10,000
5,000
14,800
15,000
80,000
10,000
7,000
700,000
100,000
40,000
I
1
$95,000
2,500
85,200
20,000
8,118
800,000
$28,527
with
with
with
1,979
500,000
with
with
ft
a
B
m
a
2
8
-
-
-
$72,507
real
estate
R.E.
-
-
2,894
$655
1,995
R.E.
12,250
18,021
14,428
-
7,650
254,500
.
R.E.
2,548
-
200
-
6,040
-
4,080
-
2,000
R.E.
210,000
-
7,698
-
8,892
s
• «
I'
1^
$8.»9
83,889
8,687
2^406
6,066
4.704
9,865
ia,s<i
27,688
104,382
2,812
8,626
464.706
434
2,198
1.856
3.707
8,856
3,600
8,308
1,120
388,945
19,658
1485
a Adjourned.
b Not h«ld; statemeot of July 18, 1804.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
109
oj Corporations — Contiuued.
AssBTS — Con.
LlABIUTIlB.
"O 6
• si
ill!
•
o
2
*
m
a
s
a
a
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
'3
•
1
OQ
3
Oh
3
•
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
3
&
$29,947
-
$2,667
$40,867
$20,000
$19,257
-
$1,800
-
$40,857
-
-
-
-
120.923
66,500
59,500
-
3,923
-
129,928
-
-
a 5,000
-
7,687
7,500
-
-
137
-
7,637
4«,001
-
-
-
144,007
100,000
41,500
- ■
2,607
-
144,007
7,417
-
1,100
-
17,073
10,000
5,739
-
1,334
-
17,073
2,003
-
826
$780
10,606
9,759
747
-
-
-
10,506
S0,152
-
-
-
82,167
15,000
12,013
-
5,154
-
32,167
0,150
-
-
187,688
257,694
225,000
32,694
-
-
-
257.694
17.228
-
-
-
79,184
40,000
16,846
-
15,838
$7,000
79,184
18,546
-
6,268
-
129,191
10,000
93,575
-
25,616
-
129,191
1,747
-
4,516
-
9,075
5,000
3,046
-
1,029
-
9,075
1,150
-
6,000
-
22,326
10,000
2,097*
-
9,029
1,200
22,826
-
-
-
064,706
500,000
-
-
247,152
217,554
964,706
-
-
8,088
-
258,012
170,000
87,210
-
802
-
258,012
22,473
-
126
-
86,048
10,000
26,048
-
-
-
36,048
861
-
-
2,630
5,056
5,000
16
&$40
-
-
5,056
61
-
-
25,852
29,110
13,100
16,010
-
-
-
29,110
2,963
-
c282
7,053
19,784
15,000
4.734
-
-
-
19,734
4,000
-
d 22,500
-
80,000
30,000
-
-
-
30,000
6,884
-
4,061
766
16,538
10,000
^538
-
-
-
16,538
2,000
« $2,600
-
-
7,620
7,000
600
-
-
-
7,600
433,619
1
/ 69,106
i -
1,332,161
700,000
600,000
-
82,161
-
1,882,161
120,466
-
22,222
170,038
100,000
35,332
84,701
-
170,083
76,862
-
-
24,174
106,653
40,000
65,668
^
-
-
105,653
a Trade-mark, ete. b Bamplea. c Office fixtnree. d Q^ood-wlll and profits of the paper.
$ Oood'Will. / Improvement acoonnt. g Interest, general expense and insurance.
110
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAICB OF CORPO-
RATION.
Bxoelaior Cement Com-
pany, . • • •
Excelsior Cutlery Com-
pany^ . ■ • «
SxoeUlor Shoe Com-
pany, The, .
F. A. Whitney Carriage
Company, .
F. B. Rogers Sliver Com-
pany, . • . •
F. B. Washbnm and Co.
Corporation,
F. B. Tonng Company,
The
F. O. Dewey Company,
F. P. Cox Laundry Com-
pany, The, .
Falrchild Paper Com-
pany, ....
Fairfield Paper Com-
pany, • • • >
FUrhayen Iron Foundry
Company, .
Fairhaven Water Com-
pany, ....
Fall River and Provi-
dence Steamboat Com-
pany (for 1893), .
Fall River and Provi-
dence Steamboat Com-
pany, ....
Fall River Bleachery, .
Fall River Dally Globe
Publishing Company,
The, ....
Fall River Dally Herald
Publishing Company,
The
Fall River Electric Light
Company, The, .
Fall River Gas Works
Company, .
Fall River Granite Com-
pany, ....
Fall River Ice Company,
1894.
Mar. 12,
Mar. 29,
Jan. 2,
Sept. 4,
Aug. 6,
Apr. 28,
Mar. 22,
Feb. 8,
May
18.
May
8.
Apr.
8,
May
7.
July
10.
May
8.
Dec.
12.
June
4,
Aug.
7,
June 25,
Apr.
4.
Sept.
4,
Jan.
».
Nov.
21.
1804.
Feb. 26,
Feb. 24,
1898.
a June 6,
1894.
July 17,
June 28,
Jan. 18,
Feb. 26,
Jan. 17,
Mar. 7,
Feb. 26,
Jan. 24,
Feb. 16,
« June 28,
1893.
Oct. 26,
1894.
Oct. 26,
May 17,
May 24,
May 8,
Mar. 12,
July 26,
Jan. 17,
Nov. 18,
a
"Sg
^
^
u
*?
a S
talStoeka
theCorpol
^g
^
1
P
$9,800
6,000
10,000
84,000
50,000
60,000
20,000
20,000
15,000
860,000
200,000
20,000
60,000
96,000
96,000
400,000
10,000
15,000
200,000
288,000
12,000
40,000
A88BTB.
i
Jk
}^u
5 o
m
•
*£
a
0
•O u
•o
{1
a 9
ss
u
i"
a
4
13^
$8,000
82,000
78,171
638,209
250,000
14,684
16,660
46,000
46,000
827,060
81,000
186,170
7.866
85,473
$500
$7,600
80,000
with
with
with
6,827
1,603
with
with
28,792
62,000
R.E.
with
106,170
6,000
8,428
real
real
8,807
15,047
R.E.
R.E.
298,258
2,848
10,500
R.E.
80,000
1,366
27,060
$600
926
-}
7,000
6,420
tf 14.701
17,090
estate
estate
6,109
92,182
191,184
18,841
6,000
80,660
209,919
4,412
6.604
3 •
$6,70S
788
b 1,916 i
c674}
88,000
124
82,048
15,188
83^75
8,017
18,896
71,273
4,606
762
8,558
6«ST8
46,990
8,086
8,840
21,801
88ft588
6,990
6b808
a Should have been, b Cash on hand, c Debts receivable, unoertaln value; Co. has ceased to do boaliieas.
d Fixtures, teams, etc* s In lien of annual.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
Ill
of CorporcUions — Con tinned.
in
lUi
8,106
66,704
85,060
0,880
11,202
0M88
08JBS0
8,602
S4S
2,460
1,204
10,006
1,687
1,800
16,200
M60
1,688
ABSBTB— OOD.
a
I
04
s
S
$207
-1
t3&
2,086
200
a 4,000
e 11,823
1,600
4,242
d 87,000
d 87,000
6,284
10,766
02,614
12,868
8
II
•1.068
7,610
40,870
248
216
1
$17,682
6,128
10,000
286,008
60,000
160,703
87,017
84,707
26,460
717,142
426,026
36,501
114,108
180,014
180,067
686,108
26,686
80,805
201,806
806,080
I
22,217 '
00,613
LiABHiimiB.
CD
3
8-
o
3
8
1,
f^8
u
n
■■ 9
2
I
•».«00
•4.660
-
•8.672
6,000
128
-
-
10,000
-
-
-
84,000
124,370
-
2,810
60,000
-
-
-
00,000
60,708
5 $40,000
-
20,000
17,017
-
-
20,000
18,062
1,716
-
16,000
4,072
-
6,787
860,000
817,483
-
40,700
200,000
208,840
-
22,070
20,000
12,070
-
2.626
26,000
80,108
-
-
00,000
20,070
-
22,0a
00,000
20.041
-
28,026
400,000
176,344
-
8,760
10,000
2,647
-
12,888
16,000
16,800
-
606
200,000
1,020
-
880
288,000
0,016
-
08,870
12,000
8,368
-
880
40,000
20,018
-
-
$25,000
0,026
I
$17,682
6,128
10,000
286,606
60,000
160,708
87,017
84,707
26,460
717,142
426,026
86,601
114,168
188,014
180,667
686,108
86,686
80,806
201,866
805,086
22,217
60,618
a FnraUim and flxtarcs.
b Surplus.
e RMenre for Improvement*.
d BteamboeU.
112
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abiftract of Cebtificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
a
I
II
I
O
I
3
Fall River Iron Worka
Oompaay, .
Fall River Lithograph
Company, The, .
Fall River Machine Com-
pany, . . . .
Fall River Manufactory,
Fall River Real Estate
Aasooiation of Fall
River, ....
Fall River Bpool and
Bobbin Company,
Fall River Bteam and
Oae Pipe Company —
corporation.
Fall River Working,
men's Co-operative A e-
■odatlon,
Falmouth Cranberry
Company, The, .
Family Co-operative
Grocery Company,
The, • . • .
Farmington River Water
Power Company,
Farr Alpaca Company, .
Farrlngton Printing
Company, .
Farwell Bleachery,
Faulkner Manufacturing
Company, .
Fayette Shaw Leather
Company, .
Ferd. F. French & Co.,
Limited,
Finlay Paper Company,
First Swedish Co-opera-
tive Store Company of
QnlD8igamond,W'orces-
ter, Mass., .
First Univeraalist Meet-
Ing House in Worces-
ter, Proprietors of the,
Fisher Manufacturing
Company, The, .
18M.
Oct. 23,
Mar.
6.
Oct.
81.
Oct.
29,
Jan.
16,
Feb.
28,
Oct.
20,
Feb.
3.
Aug.
81,
Apr.
8.
Oct.
18,
July
26,
Mar.
81,
June 20,
June 26,
Apr.
24,
Aug.
».
Mar.
w.
Mar.
6,
Dec.
26.
Oct.
8.
1894.
Oct. 19,
Jan. 84,
Oct 26,
Oct. 22,
Jan. 9,
1893.
Oct. 81,
1894.
Oct. 16,
Jan. 2,
July 26,
Mar. 29,
Oct. 10,
June 23,
Mar. 22,
June 28,
Jan. 24,
Apr. 12,
July 18,
1808.
Nov. 20,
1894.
Feb. 10,
Dec. 13,
&Oct. 8,
$
1,000,000
20,000
A88BT8.
13
&
^
•O k
0 •
a
S
I $908,183
6,000
96,000 46,000
180,000
110,000
21,000
7,600
26,000
26,000
4,000
100,000
400,000
6,000
200,000
100,000
60,000
75,000
80,000
8,000
6,460
600,000
114,600
860,000
2,888
84,100
46,600
276,000
62,000
16,000
1,600
89,271
$142,600
$760,688
$
1,688,408
1,600
4,000
2,015
40,000
6»000
2M00
49,600
66,000
175,656
with
R.B.
-
888
2,600
-
-
-
1,605
-
12,000
-
81,814
2.846
667
17,262
a 28,838
-
-
126,000
-
-
2,000
80,000
-
90,701
10,000
42,000
28,000
10,000
6,000
8,000
with
R.B.
-
82,271
7,000
-
70,000
687,346
with t
b'ld'gs^
3
H
S^
il
I
$40,188
600
84,758
2,770
18,003
21.101
7,T97
1,385
204
4,206
281
270,183
1,780
75,600
6,270
218,172
68,614
500
18,000
90
117,100
a Road and dam.
b Statement of June 1, 1894.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — ^
of CorpoTOtUma — CoDtinued.
A..n.-0
LUBIUTIEI.
1i
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
i
_L
tS0S.B»1
-
,,j:«.
1,»3,I8S
-
(760.184
a^^
•iijaa
ll».*ll
iB,4n
-
-
10,»I1
ST.TM
1^
1()4,S7T
»(I,OM
«S,iTT
164,277
3s,m
1IS,il3
M3,&!0
180,000
8W,6a>
608.630
1<
a«s,oi)3
U,000
110,000
J1.000
340,000
.
18.008
ssB.ooa
24,000
14JH
M,we
T,MO
7.171
-
8.M6
aa.H0
i,«ii
-
*24a
.-
»^
]S,3M
1.080
-
488
•600
1M>3
no
-
»
-
S\Slg
15,000
8.000
2,818
-
86,818
t.<ra
l,Wi
I,6«
3,816
8.288
1.440
-
7,670
-
3 1.^1
UJ»
101^1
100,000
1,821
-
-
-
101,831
H»,>M
nfl,*3i
400,000
143.818
••"■"»
82.816
-
770,481
S,«»
'
1,188
6,000
661
,
388
6,788
i.«t
-
U1,9T0
i»oo,ooo
-
10.070
«^
261,070
loi^ne
-
IBS,**!
100,000
78.™
-
8,803
-
ie2.0Wi
.^
1I«,(»S
60.000
146,080
20,761
VW
2»,4««
U,ltt
-
SM
1U,1M
16,000
80,100
-
-
114,100
iflti
-
■^
8I1,«»
BO.0OO
2,000
-
32.000
va%
-
]T,M4
8>^1
3,000
6,«0
l«
1 ,«.
778
ijsu
17.084
89.801
141.W
I?5S!
1 -
930,873
600,000
246.UI
176,743
020,818
114
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abttraet of Cbbtificates op Comdition
NAME OF CORPO-
When Certificate was
Filed.
eetlng.
in.
RATION.
o
1
F i B k Mannfactnring
Company, .
1884.
Not. 34,
1804.
Not. 19,
$60,000
Fiakdale Mills,
Feb. 16,
Feb. 0,
400,000
Flske Wharf and Ware,
house Company,
June 10,
Feb. 12,
160,000
Fitohbnrg Co^>peratIve
Association,
Jan. ao.
1806.
a Not. 6,
1,866
FitohbnrgGas Company,
Sept. 8,
1894.
July 26,
160,000
Fitohbnrg Mannfactnr-
ing Company,
Sept. 18,
July 0,
100,000
Fitchburg Steam Engine
Company, .
June 25,
June 6,
40,000
Fitchburg Worsted Com-
pany
Apr. 28,
b Mar. 81,
260,000
FitU Land and Power
Company, .
Mar. 21,
Feb. 8,
26,000
Flax Leather Manufact-
uring Company, .
June 22,
June 20,
100,000
Flax Pond Fishing Com-
pany in Dennis, .
June 7,
Jan. 81,
760
Flint Mills, . . .
Not. «,
Not. 6,
680,000
Florence Furniture Com-
pany
Apr. 27,
Apr. 18,
20,000
Florence Manufacturing
Company, .
Feb. 2,
Jan. 80,
100,000
Flynt Building and Con-
struction Company, .
July 11,
Apr. «,
30,000
Fobes, Hayward ft Co.
(Incorporated), .
Feb. 2,
Jan. 0,
160,000
Forbes Lithograph Man-
ufacturing Company,
The, ....
May 14,
Apr. 24,
176,000
Ford Bit Company, The,
Mar. 1,
Jan. 81,
80,000
Forehand Arms Com-
pany
June 6,
May 8,
76,000
Foster's Wharf Com-
pany
Jan. 18,
Jan. 0,
800,000
Foundry Supply Com-
pany, The, .
June 26,
Jan. 28,
6,000
Foxboro' Foundry and
Machine Company, .
Sept. 7,
June 5,
20,000
Framingham Box Com-
pany, The, .
Mar. 6,
Feb. 8,
10,000
AS8ST8.
1
1
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
■
1
a
n
•
.3
Cash and Debts
Reoelyabla.
$28,000
«
..
$10,000
$14,206
280,000
with
R.B.
270,000
n,4M
226,000
-
-
-
86*089
88,604
$2,860
•81.186
126,664
731s
64,418
with
real
eilate
0,273
28,616
8,600
26,116
88,067
84.n8
-
100,000
-
161,687
86,814
46,176
26,000
20,176
-
881
-
-
-
-
e 16,000 {
1,020
800
-
-
-
-
186,172
7,672
127,600
414,888
81,648
8,000
with
R.E.
1,000
17,017
16,000
-
-
20,000
18,^
6,600
2,600
8,000
10,000
68,988
00,000
-
-
60,000
141,663
.
.
60,000
127,810
187.368
-
-
-
7,411
1319
-
-
-
66,002
16,«IB
800,000
-
-
-
6,8es
-
-
-
26
1,188
-
-
-
6,000
0,070
-
-
-
7,000
6.801
a Should haTe been.
6 Adjourned.
c Real estate mortgage.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
115
of Corporations — Con tinned.
Abbktb — Con.
Liabilities.
1
a
1
•
m
a
1
>1
2 .
g-o
P
1
Capital Stock.
«
s
t
S
1
Balance Profit
and LoM.
Reserye for De-
preciation.
•
3
O
$21,279
.
_
$73,486
$60,000
$3,164
«
$16,331
$6,000
$78,485
42,708
-
$4,826
-
820,887
400,000
68,162
-
16,735
160,000
620,887
-
-
65.000
-
316,680
160,000
al88,969
-
31,670
-
815,639
-
-
-
-
-
1,356
-
-
-
-
1,356
2,725
-
-
-
160,606
160,000
19,200
-
496
-
160,696
9iAn
-
-
$34,800
181,046
100,000
81,046
-.
-
-
181,046
26,e09
-
-
-
128,060
40,000
81,007
-
1,963
-
128,060
111,801
-
-
-
400,163
260,000
-
-
-
150,152
400,162
-
-
-
-
46,666
26,000
20.600
-
-
66
46,666
-
-
-
88,071
100,000
100,000
-
-
-
-
100,000
«
-
-
460
760
760
-
-
-
-
760
ftlJQB
-
-
-
678,361
680,000
-
-
03,351
-
678,351
4^7
-
-
81,264
20,000
4,720
-
-
-
24,729
7M17
-
-
-
128,080
100,000
18,980
-
-
10,000
128,080
•
-
(51.276
j 8,615
( -
70,878
80,000
19,101
-
30,277
-
70,378
76.000
-
U,000
-
842,683
160,000
120,000
-
22,688
60,000
842,588
SS7.180
.
.
.
661,712
176,000
132,682
-
244,080
-
661,712
0,042
$3,045
-
8,708
26,026
21,900
4,026
-
-
-
25,925
07,010
-
27*400
-
166,080
76,000
40,071
-
18,072
81,987
166,030
-
-
-
-
314,892
300,000
9,000
-
6,802
314,892
1,212
-
-
8,673
11,012
6,000
6,012
-
-
-
11,012
10,100
-
5,160
-
29,610
16»300
12,136
-
1,164
-
20,610
4.80
-
-
*"
17,624
10,000
4,877
-
1,247
2,000
17,624
a Inelading mortgasea on real estate.
b Insarance stock.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cehtificates of Cokditiom
1
S
i..™
HAUE OP CORPO-
1
1
RATION.
■3
1
1
1
TH
Umj \
IBH.
Apr. 14,
•is.m
tjtu
Cooip«.r(forl8BS), .
J«.. «.
B.pl.'».
80,000
(13,003
wllb
R.E.
•^Otl
4.14B
Compuij. . . .
Dm. M.
ft Oct. is,
UM3
13.600
•0.408
wdfowtrCompdn/,
FmBlDBhun Odd FbI-
10*l'%BlUllll|AlK»l.
•UOD
M«. !1,
F«b, 3.
Ju. «.
76.M0
•,000
S1.M*
R.K.
18,000
lrfa.881
1 ..»
OotOIWD)', .
Ju. SI.
6Ju.11,
iist.oao
10.000
160
e.8so
10.000
M
■^asi-ir:
Mm.M,
Feb. M.
WfiK
»,TM
wltfa
R.B.
1(7,162
\61S
'^'ZS.T "":
llu. t.
Feb. ai.
M,OO0
B.400
wtlb
B.S.
1,100
10.480
7t>DkllnBdi]<!Ulon>l
60.000
1B.OO0
-
« 60,000
ll.OOT
17 *M
Pnoktm BleclHo Uiht
OompMj. . . .
AQ,. 7.
July IT,
1.J90
Fnnklln Oiborn Com.
p«>y
Ao(. T.
Jnly 8,
80.0W
86,000
9.000
1T.000
13.000
is,sss
FriBkltn Piper Coni-
pmr, , , , ,
U*7 a».
SC.y J.
60.000
100.000
nth
R.E.
16.884
FnakUD PiTk Lud and
194,800
1.000,000
188.460
with
K.E.
-
Compuif. . . .
July 10.
Jane S.
FnnkllD W»Mr Com-
p^y
Anv.lh
Feb. fc
78,000
/ 188,386
-
«
VrmnklonUllKTlM. .
M.y 11.
Apr. 24.
80,000
a.ooo
BOO
1,J00
i,sio
7TMl*Dd Looinl* OOB.
800.000
76,000
M.«4
wllb
B.B.
13,101
Fraib Pood IM OoB.
p«>r
M«y 3.
Apr. IS.
7.»»
Flick Fluo Cut Co., .
Apt. IS,
Uu. 13.
ia,ooo
600
-
6.00O
vn*
<M
Apr. SO,
Apr. 17,
M6.000
1,278.000
4.030
Fglton ItoD Fanndry
0.=.|»<.y. . . .
S.PI.M.
Jaly 8.
8ft.000
11.800
witb
B.B.
8.«n
'tmar. '...'.
M»y 16.
Apr.M.
120,000
-
-
-
6»,Ma
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
117
of Corporations — Continued.
Assets — Con.
-So,
19
a
a
^
o
w
«
S
s
§
««
«
£
s
«3
O
s
3
O
•4,T39
1,247 $8,062
423
e 3,063
8,725 90,000
16,831
0,606
55,368
118,679
51,687
$120
( 040,794
i 621,848
a 78,672
20,000
$311
245,496
d 1,122
1,872
547,902
2,170
812
68,212
1,000,000
A 48,401
33,214
27,460
$31,401
158,637
101,221
179,270
15,568
265,964
80,096
28,710
122,796
12,207
171,790
177,571
256,784
1,000,000
133,415
30,700
628,209
164,551
15,134
1,270,930
18,045
127,215
LlABIUTIBS.
o
2
GQ
3
a
o
Q
9
1
^.
£3
*« 5
0 0
Balance
and Lo
**a
Reserve
preeia
$18,000
80,000
80,000
75,000
9,000
125,000
50,000
20,000
50,000 j
10,000
50,000
60,000
$13,401
72,258
77,039
104,270
3,200
140,964
25,977
6,695
51,026
« 21,770
07,212
97,586
$6,284
8,363
$4,182
184,300
68,746
1,000,000
-
75,000
^60,000
80,000
700
300,000
298,867
75,000
80,989
12,000
2.240
925,000
327,606
■
568
120,000
8,369
-
4,119
-
1,200
-
2,297
/$60,000
1,078
-
19,985
-
2,738
-
8,415
29,342
-
8,562
-
804
-
4,980
-
3,846
1,815
3,500
s
o
$31,401
158,537
161,221
179,270
15,563
265,964
80,096
28,710
122,796
12,297
171,790
■•
177,571
-
255,784
-
1,000,000
-
183,415
-
80.700
( with )
J bal. {
(P.&L.)
628,209
-
164,651
15,184
22,804
1,279,989
668
-
127,215
a Line eonstraetion. b Wiring. e Vrancbise. d Teams and tools. « Permanent loan.
/ Bnrplni. g Five per cent, bonds. A Including ice. i Paid back ; corporation is closing ap its basiness.
118
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cbstificates of Comdition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
8
>
S
•
s
a
^
?
«
1
a V
^
is
9
O. D. Dows ft Compaoyi
Incorporated,
G. W. & F. Bmilh Iron
Company, .
Gardner Egg Carrier
Company, .
Gardner Electric Light i
Company, .
Gardner SoTereigna* Co-
operative AMOoiation,
The, ....
Gardner Wat^r Com-
pany, ....
Garfield & Proctor Coal
Company, .
Gately and Rogers Fur-
niture Company,
George A. Sofaastey
Company, .
Geo. C. Gill Paper Com-
pany, The, .
Geo. C. Gill Paper Com-
pany,The, (2o return) ,
George E. Barnard Com-
pany, ....
George F. Hewett Co., .
George Frost Company,
The, ....
George G. Page Box
Company, The, .
George H. Corbett Com-
pany
George H. Gilbert Man-
ufacturing Company, .
George H. Wood Com-
pany, ....
George Lawley and Son
Corporation,
George N.Newhall Com-
pany
George R. Dickinson
Paper Company, .
George W. Gale Lumber
Company, .
1894. I 1894.
Aug. 20, Apr. 28,
Jan. 26, Jan. 10,
Apr. 4,
Aug. 7,
I 1898.
Nov. 1,
June 6,
May 81,
June 18,
Feb. 14,
Aug. «,
Jan. 10,
Dec. 29,
July 8,
Aug. 10,
Jan. 24,
Oct. 26,
Sept. 6,
Jan. 24,
June 11,
Oct. 27,
1894.
July 10,
May 28,
May 7,
May 8,
Feb. 12,
Apr. 27,
1898.
Deo. 80,
1894.
Dec. 24,
May 9,
Apr. 2,
Jan. 10,
Aug. 6,
Mar. 20,
Jan. 16,
May 18,
Oct. 10,
Feb. 23, Jan. 8,
Feb. 12,
Mar. 7,
Jan. 22,
Feb. 12,
go
mm V
$80,000
124,000
7,000
80,000
8,000
100,000
126,000
6,000
120,000
100,000
100,000
200,000
60,000
100,000
68,400
6,000
1,000,000
80,000
100,000
6,000
160,000
00,000
ASSSTS.
I
•
«8
1
*S5
8>
S
a
Si
s
i
i"
&
$29,000
149,160
6,000
18,660
87,424
286,090
121,106
066,000
60,792
200,000
88,682
$18,000
with
iHth
12,660
16,000
$11,000
R.E.
R.E.
9,476
6,000
with
with
with
with
e 10,600
48,958
with
25,582
R.E.
rwd
280,000
R.E.
real
10,834
R.E.
18,000
3
■Si
5-
$10,060
20,002
a 16,688
6 23,078
12,185
2,500
9,502
•state
26,760
12,883
12,000
23,701
estate
6,4n
15,167
150,000
$1.»0
120,823
1S4
4^39
0,8S2
2,667
183,407
14,270
90,927
n,066
106,678
234.026
30,689
81,178
42,M3
2.143
89,682
32,986
30,471
6,12S
239,000
86,666
a Lines, meters, lamps and globes.
b Steam and electric plants.
c Equity In.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
119
o/ CorporaHoM — Ck>ntinaed.
Amiti— Con.
ill
•
2
•
s
2 .
-&
2
(^8
i|3
s
a
c
alanoe
and Lo
a
£
5S
n 1
5
o
•0.0M
25,000
$1,000
1,028
6,250
8,078
0,340
35,430
73,904
n,50«
46,808
11,882
80,088
82,126
8»127
351,001
24,180
21,822
11,560 i
60,312
65,320
$5,500
466
6100
<n88,240
2,000
1,255
16,417
22,608
13,852
21,578
11,388
575
8,413
•".880
881,685
$5,876 7,000
53,428
22,157
166,751
200,885
- I 24,865
20,783
177,483
485,450
468,274
307,253
68,806
178,402
281,316
10,270
1,806,673
74,152
127,327
16,694
640,021
147,879
Liabilities.
GQ
3
9
V
I
$30,000
124,000
7,000
30,000
3,600
100,000
125,000
6,000
120,000
100,000
100,000
200,000
60,000
100,000
68,400
6,000
1,000,000
80,000
100,000
5,000
150,000
60,000
$10,504
83,176
«351
1,425
60,821
24,200
16,763
57,483
89.286
« 212,000
68,274
« 250,000
97,147
12,206
73,492
101,826
4,218
338,003
30,828
15,957
11,683
338,766
87,352
a $15,000
/1.366
$2,245
104,400
8,429
16,781
51,942
2,102
34,173
10,106
8,477
213
52
58,670
3,458
11
627
Reserve for De-
preciation.
■
3
-
$51,889
$10,000
321,585
-
7,000
-
53,429
-
22,157
6,030
166,751
8,743
209,885
-
24,865
-
177,483
-
485,459
50,000
463,274
-
807,253
2,623
68,306
-
173,402
110,877
281,316
-
10,270
-
1,396,673
8,500
74,152
11,370
127,327
-
16,094
161,165
649,921
-
147,879
a Bnrplas /and.
d Pipes and mains.
b Store flztares.
e Loans.
c Interest.
/ Dividend acooant.
120 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cebtificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Geo. W. Wheelwright
Paper Oompauy, .
George Whitney Woolen
Company, .
George Woodman Com
pany, The, .
Georgetown Boot &
Shoe Company (for
18W), . . .
Georgetown Boot &
Shoe Company, .
German American Pnb
Ilshing Company, The,
German Co-operative
Association,
Germanla Mills, .
Gibbs Loom Harness
and Reed Company,
Gilbert and Barker Man
afacturing Company,
Glasgo Thread Com
pany, The, .
Glencoe Granite Com
pany, .
Glendale Elastic Fabrics
Company, .
Glenwood Furnishing
Company, The, .
Globe Gas Light Com
pany, . . ,
Globe Inyestment Com
pany, .
Globe Nail Company,
Globe Newspaper Com
pany. The, .
Globe Worsted Mills, .
Globe Yam Mills, The,
Gloucester Co-operatire
Association, .
Gloucester Electric
Company, .
1894.
Apr. 14,
1804.
Jan. 18,
July 26,
July 20,
June 1,
Jan. 26,
Jan. 2,
1808.
Dec. 6,
Dec. 14,
1804.
Dec. 5,
Oct. 4,
Aug. 11,
Mar. 1,
Jan. 8,
Jan. 81,
Jan. 20,
May IT,
Apr. 2ft,
Apr. 11,
Mar. 7,
June 1,
May 20,
Jan. 22,
Jan. 8,
Sept. 22,
June 10,
July 10,
Feb. 7,
Mar. 10,
Jan. 22,
June 27,
Apr. 27,
Feb. 10,
Jan. 20,
May 14,
Feb. 10,
Feb. 10,
1803.
Not. 27,
Oct. 31,
1804.
Oct. 18,
Mar. 5,
Jan. 24,
Oct. 4,
Aug. 6,
$800,000
00,000
75,000
10,000
10,000
5,000
1,210
150,000
50,000
40,000
50,000
5,000
250,000
20,000
250,000
500,000
260,000
125,000
00,000
1,200,000
3,000
50,000
$275,000
00,226
126,000
18,000
28,002
2,450
02,004
88,000
270,706
85,767
Assets.
1
«
1
^ .
i
a w
« o
m
b
H
Si
s
2
"a
S
ol
>A
oa
S
with
with
$2,678
26,000
4,000
with
1,800
with
126,765
26,800
with
with
43,806
88,041
with
real
real
r.fioo
estate
esUte
$1,806
1,800
$2,510
100,000 125,000
14,000
B.E.
1,150
R.E.
61,200
R.E.
R.B.
18,168
4,116
7,500
1,100
1,050
200,000
58,957
R. E.
3
OS
$08,844
24,087
145.725
15,638
16,647
2,202
1,951
152,481
6,060
106,477
36,082
8,100
160,644 118,070
00,756
15,498
a 815.259
2,242
810,709
24.672
61,100,168 j^TlJ^ \ ■ 171,719
03,418
2,124
8.405
a And mortgages.
b And coDstroetion account.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
121
of Corporations — Continned.
A88ST8~Con.
1
1
LlABILITZSS.
.•go
Patent RlghU.
•
1
1
1
Balance Profit
and LoM.
•
1
Capital Stock.
•
m
1
■
s
t
Balance Profit
and Loss.
1^
•
3
$17S,088
-
-
-
$546,382
$300,000
$155,879
•
-
$90,503
$546,382
75,896
-
-
-
100,208
60,000
86,984
-
22,274
169,208
122.000
-
-
-
267,725
75,000
186,071
-
$6,654
-
267,725
7,«»7
-
-
-
25,140
10,000
8,240
a500
{
1
6,400
wlthbal.
P.&L.
25,140
9,006
-
-
-
27,542
10,000
(10,804
1 a600
( -
6,788 j
wlthbal.
P.&L.
1 27,542
5,785
-
$1,756
-
10,762
5,000
14,762
-
-
-
19,762
1,508
-
306
-
6.823
1,210
6,017
-
-
896
6,623
180,364
-
18,228
-
610,078
150,000
350,073
-
10,000
$100,000
610,073
6^7
$ft.»oo
-
-
54,585
50,000
505
-
1,490
2,600
54,585
M,010
4,374
0,662
-
212,440
40,000
59,943
-
112,497
-
212,440
37,026
-
-
-
81,448
60,000
15,131
-
16,317
-
81,448
800
-
-
-
7,450
j
5,000
1,600
-
-
600
7.000
]n,810
5,000
-
-
558,018
260,000
267,984
-
40,034
-
558,018
34,487
-
251
-
05,494
20,000
60,965
-
-
5,529
95,494
12,356
250,000
-
-
277,854
260,000
8,868
-
18,986
-
277,854
-
-
82,723
-
1,024,747
362,600
255,125
b 373,000
j C$24,764
d 8,458
-
1,024,747
-
-
« 10,000
$147,808
250.000
250,000
-
-
-
-
250,000
-
-
36,144
-
817,610
125,000
80,000
/270,000
( -
392,619
-
817,610
27,216
-
-
-
141,612
90,000
51,480
-
132
-
141,612
468341
-
-
-
1,800,010
1,200,000
620,738
-
69,281
-
1,800,010
1,518
-
^376
-
4,017
1,605
1,480
-
942
-
4,017
~
5,000
1,786
-
146,650
60,000
iA50,000
! 33,453
{
18,197
-
146,650
a DlTldend.
d Undlylded profits.
/ On real estate.
b Debentures. c Special Oaaranty fnnd.
€ Capital stock cash dlrldend paid ; stopped manufactarlng and are selling out.
g Store flztares. A Bonds.
122
ANNUAL RETURNS OF C50RP0RATI0NS. [1894.
Ab^act oj Certificates of Condition
When Certificate was
FUed.
•
a
1
o
Q
Capital Stock as fixed
by the Corporation.
A8SKT8
>
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Real Estate.
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
&
B
•a
?
«
Machinery.
Cash and DebU
Receivable.
Olonoester Fish Com-
pany
1894.
Ang. 18,
1894.
Mar. 23,
$9,250
■^
^^
^
♦24.418
Oloncester Fish Drying
Company, .
Deo. 27,
Dec. 18,
5,000
$8,800
$800
$2,500
$1,700
5
Gloucester Oas Light
Company, .
Oct. 9,
July 17,
100,000
a 40,000
with
R. E.
45,000
12,808
Oloncester Isinglass and
Olne Company, .
Mar. 26,
6 Mar. 1,
13,600
8,125
3,200
4,925
1,500
10,470
Oloncester Lighterage
Company, The, .
Jane 25,
Apr. 18,
18,000
_
c 6,799
_
.
466
Oloncester Tow Boat
Company, The, .
Feb. 2,
Jan. 4,
4,000
a
_
_
..
2,138
Oloncester Water 6np-
ply Company,
Ang. 22,
Apr. 10,
260,000
_
«
«
.
3,878
Ooddard Machine Com-
pany. The, .
Oct. 9,
Jane 8,
10,000
•
.
»
9,500
8,191
Ooepper Brothers Com-
pany
Apr. 10,
Mar. 12,
80,000
15,000
with
R.E.
8,020
7,351
Ooetz Bilk Manufactur-
ing Co
Feb. 17,
Feb. 10,
80,000
..
.
•
8,365
1,660
Golden Rule Company,
The, ....
Feb. 16,
Feb. 5,
6,000
•
«
.
6,270
19,962
Gould and Cutler Corpo-
ration, ....
Jan. 10,
Jan. 8,
40,000
.
.
•
.
83,318
Gowdy St Remington
Shoe Company, .
July 18,
Mar. 6,
80,000
«
.
.
.
2,^
Grafton Ice Company,
The, . . . .
Apr. 9,
Mar. 28,
10,000
12,500
8,000
9,500
2,500
4,200
Grafton Water Com-
pany, The, .
Oct. 15,
Jane 12,
80,000
8,600
6,500
8,000
7,000
.
G r a n b y Co-operatire
C reamery Association,
The, ....
Apr. 10,
Apr. 2,
8,500
2,200
200
2,000
500
8.134
Granite Mills, .
Not. 80,
Oct. 22,
1,000,000
677,409
121,409
456,000
1,042,415
41,072
Granite Railway Com-
pany
Jan. 25,
Jan. 22,
250,000
250,000
with
real
estate
58,145
Granite Shoe Company,
Jan. 3,
1898.
Nov. 9,
20,000
..
—
p.
20,651
17,654
Granite Wharf Marine
Railway,
Feb. 15,
1894.
Jan. 6,
4,000
.
.
300
3,700
200
Grant Corundum Wheel
Manufacturing Com-
pany
Jan. 16,
1893.
Oct. 27,
(130,000
-
-
a And wharf.
b Adjourned.
c Wharf.
d Gone out of baslneaa.
1894.1
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
123
o/ Corporations — Continaed.
_ _ _
—
—
_
— — .
_
_ —
_
— -.
- -
A88ST8 —
Con.
LlABILITRS.
Manufactures,
Materials and
Stock In Proc-
ess.
1
1
•
m
§
3
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
1
1 Capital Stock.
1
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De<
predation.
■
3
$1,486
$2,100
$28,004
$9,250
$18,754
-
-
-
$28,004
-
-
-
-
5,005
6,000
-
-
$5
-
6,005
4,&80
-
350
-
102,738
80,000
5,000
-
17,788
-
102,738
2,173
-
-
-
22,268
13,600
756
-
4,012
$3,000
22,268
-
-
a 11,600
-
18,765
13,000
3,000
-
2,766
-
18,765
-
-
6 4,000
-
6,138
4,000
658
-
1,480
-
6,138
-
c 676,976
-
580,864
260,000
^250,000
80,854
-
680,854
3,832
-
-
$4,772
21,095
10,000
11,095
-
-
-
21,095
23,M9
-
-
-
49,320
30,000
7,228
-
5.360
6,783
49.320
30,353
-
480
-
40,758
80,000
10,768
-
-
-
40,758
2,33*
-
1,966
-
30,542
5,000
3,372
e $10,000
12,170
-
30,542
16,674
-
-
-
40,892
■
40,000
4,128
-
/ 6.764
49,892
-
6,068
1,007
46,247
30,000
15,247
-
-
46,247
-
-
-
-
19,200
10,000
7,500
-
1,700
-
19,200
-
144,600
1,780
161,780
80,000
81,780
-
-
-
161,780
294
-
-
-
6,128
3,600
2,473
-
155
-
6,128
245,762
1
5,200
-
1,911,868
1,000,000
511,673
-
400,285
■■•
1,911,868
-
-
-
-
308,145
260,000
28,020
-
30,125
808,145
6.681
-
^2,667
-
46,503
20,000
23,239
-
3,264
-
46,503
-
-
1,000
5,200
4,000
1,200
-
-
-
5,200
-
-
-
-
-
1
-
-
-
-
a Two lighters.
d Five per cent, bonds.
g Lasts and patterns.
b Tow boat.
t For subscription list.
c Construction account.
/ And balance undivided profits.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
AbHract of Cbktificatbs of Cokditiom
?
"
A«»™
■- -
3
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
1
1
1
a
9
• 117.006
^1
1^
Ormnt T»ni Compmny, .
ISM.
Dec. W,
im.
Ort. 8,
«12t.000
.
•63,162
•4*47
Ontonud Knight Uu-
Feb. 11.
Ju. IS,
300.000
.
1S1.884
as.666
108.MI
CompMiy, . . .
B.pt.il,
Mty 9,
8,000
.
.
11.2S»
Qreat BanlDglOD Kl«e-
tric Light Compuir, .
Feh. n.
Ju. 10,
»,000
.
.
1.600
(0 6.803
hl7.0S3
-
{ 4,837
U(hlComp«.y.. .
B.pt.SS,
IBM.
Apr. 11,
s,ooe
.
.
OrMnaeldEleclrio Light
lT'»
•4.000
•44.000
R. B.
88,101
a,j3»
OfsnlUld G» Light
Cooip.ny. . . .
Aug. 11,
July IK.
»,«KI
S.«l
Oreeofleld Power Com-
puij.The, . . .
MW »,
Uar. W,
8,000
J.600
lOO
1.800
1.600
.
Grey lock Hllli, The, .
JulyM.
jQlyie.
400.000
2ST.S11
-
m,<m
141 .»•
Orejrloek P.rk AuooU.
Jog* 9,
1»S.
ifMayS,
i».000
10.MT
(8.667
U,!S
i -
1S3
Gtlffllh.Aitell ■nd Culf
Compmny, . . .
Jnly M,
Mar. is.
».«»
_
12.038
8.188
Dw. M,
No, iT
800,000
iM,m
18.871
141,»1
810,838
»0,ft40
puiy
Oot. 31,
16,000
aoM
1.W1
0,604
«,9«6
•,!«
uriBgCompMy,. .
it.y •.
Apr. 1»,
m,ooo
60.000
whh
R.K.
120,168
S5.B7
QniDey Eot WiMr
[]Mt(,r Compuiy, .
Mar. M,
jFeb. 11.
W.Q00
•.276
n.A.LolliropM«nof«ol-
11 ring Compmnj, Th«
(toriSMl, . . .
Jdw 11,
im.
July IS,
u,aDo
16.800
W.00O
6,600
1,600
S.68J
H.A.LothropMunrict-
June 11.
INS.
Joly ».
46.000
16,600
10.000
6.600
2,600
7.9»i
II. d.Lothrop Uanufut-
uring Compuny, The,
July 26,
I8M.
July 11.
46.000
15,600
with
R.E.
2,600
6,131
July ae,
Fab. 14.
160,000
.
80.683
S1,SM
H. B. Solth Compioy,
Jiina U,
M.y 23,
300.000
100,024
with
R.E.
28.M3
137^8
H. B, SUreu Coinpany,
Deo. K,
July T.
»,»
t.3>2
<■ Btoun plwu i Klewrl. plut.
CjjB
H,«l0.
dBU
Matato
ii.y26.
■M.
«FiniihDDdndun
Mlandud
RMd.
/Iro
tOWOT.
0Ad
onroed.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
125
of Gorporatuma — ContiDued.
Asssn — Cod.
-•go
I
•a
I
a
s
I
1.
s
a
$8S,044
368,1W
1,2T7
2,280
2,1»7
978
f ftD.R.
1,256
201,410
2,807
38,842
92,185
8,620
7,080
7,746
83,418
160,303
18,007
-1
♦4,100
27,218
$1,877
al,l&5
dSOO
« 10,088
$4,600
4,000
^26,874
1,185
67,991
I
18,988
18,738
14,8U
77,283
18,866
$206,748
084,010
14,888
42,461
5,000
47,004
54,207
8,000
686,046
10,850
29,801
992,860
28,722
270,249
126,696
46,179
46,478
45,688
LiABUjma.
.M
I
&
o
■•a
i.
£s
o o
1
s
1
Balance
and Loi
Reserve f
preolati
1
K125,000
800,000
6,000
28,800
6,000
80,000
60,000
8,000
400,000
10,860
20,000
800,000
15,000
125,000
50,000
45,000
46,000
45,000
249,927 112,600
I
I
504,277 ;
38,955 ,
800,000
25,000
$83,405
225,620
7,827
M5,202
1,894
12,724
1,000
202,481
9.801
/ 24,000
4,920
96,209
A 41,903
1,179
1,478
187,427
200,945
18,956
C$1,665
$848
74,290
1,056
4,840
8,207
$25,000
82,615
87.280
8,802
62,040
8,882
81,120
$208,748
624,910
14,888
42,461
5,000
47,064
t
54,207
8,000
685,046
10,850
29,801
992,850
28,722
270,249
84,708
126,696
-
46,179
-
46,478
-
45,688
-
249,927
-
604,277
-
38,955
a Great Banington Oaa Company. b Bonds and interest. e Manufactarlng acooant.
d ICalBs and meters. e Type and flztnres. / Dividend.
g Constmetion. h Including dividends payable.
126
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1H94.
Abstract of CBsnFiCATES of Ck>NDrnoN
NAME OF OORPO-
RATION.
II. G. Jordan & Co., In-
corporated, .
H. H. Mayhew Com*
panyi . . . .
n. R. Barker Manafact-
nrlng Company, The,
H. 8. Lawrence Cloth-
ing Co.,
Hadley Company, .
Hallet & Davlc Piano
Manafactnrlng Com-
pany, The, .
Hamblin and Rnaaell
Manufacturing Com-
pany, . . . .
Hamilton Manufacturing
Company, The, .
Hamilton Woolen Com-
pany, . . • .
Hammond Reed Com-
pany, . . . .
Hampden Co-operative
AModatlon,
Hampden Emery and
Corundum Company, .
Hampden Olazed Paper
and Card Company, .
Hampden Paint and
Chemical Company, .
Hampshire Paper Com-
pany, . • • .
Hampshire Reaerrolr
Company, The, .
Hampton Co-operallre
Creamery Aaaodatlon,
Hanoock InspiratorCom-
pany, . . • .
Hanover Water Com-
pany
Harbor Bar Fish Weir
Company, .
Hargraves Mills, .
Harrington & Richard-
son Arms Company, .
8
8
18M.
May 35
Aug. 7
Apr. 30
Mar. 80
Feb. 0
Sept. 29
May 6
Aug. 14
Jan. 18
Jan. 80,
June 7
Apr. 5
Feb. 12
Feb. 10
Feb. 2
May 9
Jan. 29
May 7
June 12
Jan. 11
Deo. 11
May 21
a
S
O
1894.
Apr. 26,
July 2,
Apr. 10,
Mar. 16,
Jan. 80,
July 28,
Jan. 8,
July 12,
Jan. 17i
Jan. 9,
Apr. S5,
Feb. 3,
Jan. 27,
Jan. 26,
Jan. 81,
May 1,
Jan. 24,
1893.
June 26,
1894.
Feb. 16,
Jan. 1,
Oct. 25,
May 8,
$150,000
18,000
80,000
40,000
600,000
400,000
5,000
1,800,000
1,000,000
100,000
2,000
600,000
56,000
60,000
200,000
20,000
2,500
100,000
30,000
6,000
800,000
75,000
I
1
A88STI.
i
^u
__ •
1l
5
•9 h
3
J
a
n
o
s
3
"8
•4.400
166,287
900,000
894,000
1^1,000
with
with
$206,000
with
66,570
85,000
with
•45,000
R.S.
R.E.
688,000
real
80,204
R. E.
86,578 22,868 12,710
a 50,000
11,475
64,475
8.000 j
-
20,000
4,500
1,500
70,000
with
380,817
81,870
61,000
11,727
8,000
R.E.
800
848,947
50,178
$22,000
6,166
1.000
480,768
20,000
6,000
ealaie
9,670
27,482
16,000
11,812
j 40,000
1,200
60,000
700
809,808
50,700
$84,748
18,556
17,835
2,423
87,227
270,021
ll,09r»
706,000 1,310,659
767,403
66,622
1,045
67,046
66,S»
14,098
64,000
238
32.372
200
814
79.7:
29,106
a Mill.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
127
oj Corporations — ContinQed.
A88KTS~Oon.
LlABILITRB.
2 .
S
•■-1
1
1
S
1
Balanoe Profit
and LoM.
3
Capital Stock.
5
Reserve for De-
preciation.
«
3
O
•».ow
-1
a|S8,000
6,041
-
$210,601
$160,000
$55,824
-
$7,530
$6,828
$210,601
12,QT0
-
100
-
41.200
18,000
18,125
-
4,165
5,000
J 61,000
41,200
22,448
1
1
-
-
40,788
30,000
2,850
-
7,033
-
40,783
56.600
1
c 10,500
-
68.428
40,000
28,428
-
-
-
68,423
282,153
j
(i 60,428
-
1,016.868
600.000
880,206
-
77,660
-
1,016,868
01,750
-
81,000
-
612,771
400.000
123,088
$80,730
-
-
612.771
28,508
$500
600
-
41,686
5,000
7,700
-
28,086
-
41,686
881,637
-
-
-
3.782,106
1,800.000
1,286,210
-
-
646,086
3,782,196
906,034
-
24,574
-
8,830,011
1.000,000
1,586,824
-
758,067
^^
8,339,911
37.217
-
-
-
144.618
100,000
38,740
-
5.864
-
144,613
4,a»
-
88
-
5.812
« 2.266
2,488
255
354
-
5,312
51,566
-
/274,867
-
486,531
500,000
22,406
-
-
-
522,406
88,806
-
-
184,785
1
j 56,000
64,180
-
27,757
36,789
184,736
13,676
-
-
75,164
50,000
24,084
~
1,080
-
75.164
05,668
-
-
285,028
200,000
6,000
20,028
with
reeervee
235,028
-
-
-
-
20,238
20,000
-
-
288
-
20,288
-
-
-
"-
5,700
2,500
-
-
-
2,600
OT.884 1
-
-
-
260,006
100,000
64,587
-
05,410
-
260,006
-
-
-
$280
480
375
1
55
• "
-
-
430
4,500
-
-
-
6,814
6,000
-
-
814
-
6,814
321.515
-
-
1.601,365
800,000
680.602
-
160,763
-
1,591,365
13,815
-
-
-
155,611
75,000
31,335
-
14,276
35,000
155,611
a Horeea, vehicle* and hamese. b Reeervee for poor acoonnta.
d New engine bouee, engine and bollera. e $265 overpaid.
c Flxtares.
/ For developing mine*.
128
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates op Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Haryard Piano Com
pany, The, .
HaatlDga & Bona Pub
Ushing Company,
Hatch-Wall Flashing
Company, The, .
Hathaway Manufaetor
ing Company, The,
Hathaway, Soule & Har
lington, Incorporated
HaTerhill Electric Com
pany, .
Haverhill Electric Com
pany (2d return),
Haverhill Qm Light
Company, .
Haverhill Gazette Com
pany, The, .
Haverhill Ice Company
The, • • •
Haverhill Iron Works
The, .
Haverhill Odd Fellows'
Hall Association,
Hawks Electric Com
pany, .
HaydenviUeManafaetur
ing Company, The,
Heath Co-operative
Creamery Association
Heliotype Printing Com
pany, The, .
Henry C. Hunt Com
pany, . . •
Henry F. Miller and Sons
Piano Company, .
Henry W. Wellington
Company, .
Henry Wood's Sons
Company, .
H e r d i c Phaeton Com
pany, .
Hetherston Importing
Company, The, .
1804.
Aug. 20,
Aag. 6,
Feb. 21,
Nov. 10,
Jane 177,
Jan. 20,
Oct. 6,
Sept. 14,
July 26,
Aag. 14,
June 26,
Jan. 1,
Feb. 10,
Apr. 24,
Dec. 22,
Jane 14,
Feb. 12,
July 8,
May 0,
Jane 1,
Feb. 27,
Feb. 1,
1804.
aAag.20
aJalylO
Jan. 16,
Nov. 8,
Jane 5
6 Jan. 10,
Sept. 10
Jaly 11
Jan. 28,
Mar. 31
1802.
Apr. 18,
1803.
Dec. 10,
1804.
Jan. 8,
Feb. 28
Oct. 1
Feb. 10,
Jan. 22,
a Jane 28
Jan. 18,
Jan. 1
Jan. 27
Jan. 31
$ft.ooo
40,000
6,000
800,000
260,000
127,600
127,600
76,000
10,000
40,000
80,000
81,360
12,000
160,000
1.500
76,000
10,000
160,000
9,000
100,000
76,000
20,000
$40,000
316,864
04,000
288,086
20,146
11,600
40,000
1,600
68,263
$16,000
16,864
14,000
10,444
with
with
6,600
$26,000
200,000
80,000
318,206
real
R. E.
6,000
clOO
6,088
1,600
48,170
$28,071
70S
621,066
87,800
( witl
} b'ld'i
with
estate
107,020
0,000
8,000
400
28,469
6,000
1,606
7.847
41.084 I
$2.W1
62,061
190
44,868
460,066
( 8,760
7,360
6,101
6,081
4.273
832
26,220
76,036
670
11,207
3,306
64.099
9,SoT
46,09:i i
d 2,447 s
1,772
4,2Sl
a Adjoamed.
b Spedal.
c And water privilege.
d Snspense account.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
129
of Corporatitnu — Continued.
AMXT8— Oon.
LL4Bii.rnx8.
S.cu
a
•
ja
s
a
1
i
8
1
1
a
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
3
•
OQ
3
«
•
1
•
t
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
predation.
»
3
$16,861
-
$2,848
-
$20,706
$5,000
$12,004
$8,791
-
$20,705
-
-
-
-
120,122
40,000
22,782
-
67,340
-
120,122
77
•8,500
260
$682
6,802
6,000
802
-
-
-
5,302
221,392
-
-
-
1,108,000
800,000
291,000
-
12,000
-
1,103,090
63,086
-
-
-
046,860
250,000
378,000
-
-
$17,260
645,850
8,918
-
-
280,822
127,500
84,800
-
28,920
-
280,322
4,910
-
-
246,874
127,500
02,782
26,142
-
245,874
16,683
-
1,600
251,300
75,000
28,815
148,094
-
251,800
-
-
254
16,285
10,000
6,286
-
-
-
16,235
a 1,800
-
-
38,501
04,104
40,000
24,104
-
-
-
04,164
-
-
6 8,486
e 5,505
1 60»000
80,000
80,000
-
-
-
-
80,000
-
-
tfl28
12,406
68,450
81,850 1
« 20,000)
/ 1,600 S
^000)
-
-
-
58,450
4.887
-
11,204
"
40,821
12,000
22,680
-
0,286
-
40,821
104^
-
-
271,824
160,000
1
120,722
-
1,102
^
271,824
-
-
205
-
2,876
1,160
1,279
-
440
-
2,875
7.446
-
0,642
28,414
82,107
75,000
7,107
-
-
-
82,107
11,100
-
-
•
10,405
10,000
8,800
-
006
-
19,405
170,980
A 10,000
-
-
800,080
150,000
160,298
-
8,788
-
309,036
-
0,337
9,000
-
-
337
-
9,387
80,328
-
-
-
128,054
100,000
25,280
-
3,074
128,954
-
1,000
91,700
83,066
180,304
75,000 j
i 82,000
29,304
-
-
-
186,364
15,090
1,461
53
21,424
10,000
11,424
-
-
-
21,424
a lee. b Treaaory stock. e Oatatandlng unpaid stock. d Sinking fand. « Mortgage note.
/ Notes, ff Bills. h And scales and patterns. i Bonded.
130
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates
OF Condition
a
•
Ized
tiOD.
A8SXT8.
NAME OP CORPO-
RATION.
WhenCertificaU
Filed.
1
O
1
Capital Stock as 1
by the Corpora
Real EsUte.
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
a
2
o
•
1
3
Hevwood Boot and Shoe
Company, .
18M.
Apr. 8,
1804.
Mar. 5,
$100,000
»
s
s
$86,807
$78,814
High Rock Granite Com-
pany, The, .
Apr. 11,
1803.
a Dec. 20,
6,000
$1,500
$1,000
$600
2
Highland Foundry Com*
pany, ....
Apr. 4,
1804.
Jan. 20,
80,000
.
.
.
500
30,324
Highland Ice Company,
June 13,
May 15.
10,000
36,000
27,000
0.000
400
2,000
Highland MllU, .
Feb. 7,
Jan. 18.
70,000
15,000
with
R.E.
26,855
28.143
Hillii Company, The, .
Nov. 20,
Nov. 12,
30,000
22,077
-
-
10,700
2,784
Hlngham Cordage Com-
pany, ....
Feb. 8,
Feb. 5,
1
25,000
—
-
35,000
40,000
820
Hlngham Dairy Asaocla-
ilon, ....
June 25,
Feb. 8,
20,000
0,500
6,000
3,500
360
4,46S
Hlngham Water Com-
pany
Aug. 7,
Aug. 0,
120,000
, 820,680
with
real
estate
1,567
Hintdale Co-operative
Creamery Auoclation,
Oct. 28,
Oct. 18,
4.000 '
.
.
3,145
i,n5
4,819
HolUngaworth & Voee
Company, .
jQly 18,
May 0.
400,000
445,641
with
real
esute
168,230
HolUnnworth and Whit-
ney Company, .
liay 16,
Apr. 80,
1
700,000
422,000
127,000
205,000
278.000
167,055
HoUieton Hameee Com-
pany, ....
Feb. 27,
Jan. 8,
6,000
—
-
2.000
6,173
HolUeton Water Com-
pany, ....
Apr. 27,
a Feb. 8,
60,000
8,000
8,000
6,000
0.000
.
Holmes Provision and
Cold Storage Com-
pany
Oct. 13,
Sept. 1,
1
80,000
17,600
b 15,837
28,928
Holtzer-Cabot Electric
Company, The, .
Mar. 28,
Mar. 6,
100,000
(
.
-
28)612
67,880
Holyoke and Northamp-
ton Boom and Lumber
Company, .
June 80,
May 10,
1
1
50,000
1
1
26,000
4.000
22,000
14,000
.
Holyoke and Sonth Had-
ley Falls Ice Company,
The, ....
Mar. 6,
1803.
Dec. 23,
15,000
35,563
with
R.E.
^
3.265
Holyoke Bar Co., The, .
Feb. 1,
1804.
a Jan. 10,
10,000
•
-
1.000
8,627
Holyoke Card and Paper
Company, The, .
Mar. 5,
Jan. 0,
100,000
25.066
with
R.E.
24,150
63,306
Holyoke Coal and Wood
Company, .
Oct. 20,
a Oct. 15,
6,000
—
.
.
8,841
Holyoke Envelope Com-
pany
June 6,
May 20,
30,000
55,000
with
R. B.
50,000
1
66,892
a Adjourned.
b And flztures.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
131
0/ Gorporatiotu — Con tinned.
«» • *«
57ia
$60,202
92,971
6,000
20,838
42,570
96
1,632
430
117,119
230,686
12,110
87,147
9,994
09,709
1,096
4,755
73,104
10,863
38,244
A8SBT8— Con.
3
•a
s
a
2
£
$576
9
O
a
I
o
$76
12,000
22,199
8,700
1,908
62,200
100,000
3,083
7,364
^8
0*0
$6,364
2,406
1,821
10,000
6,000
2,570
o
H
$181,883
6,931
147,776
43,400
89,887
87,140
96,114
24,849
334,737
10,109
788,190
1,197,040
20,283
104,147
71,769
109,784
60,000
47,887
14,882
181,625
28,274
210,186
•
M
o
s
02
1
i
P*
.A
3
&
LlABILITOBB.
$100,000
6,000
80,000
10,000
70,000
80,000
76,000
20,000
120,000
8,426
400,000
700,000
6,000
60,000
30,000
109,000
60,000
16,000
10,000
100,000
6,000
80,000
$40,988
981
67,776
30,804
9,718
21,929
1,700
4,849
160,000
4,681
356,882
872,120
10.246
64,147
41,769
49,633
23,000
4,142
45,223
18,766
109,004
Profit
M.
OS
O
a-s
alanee
and L
eservo
precia
1 «
« 1
5
o
1
$24,287
1
$16,168
1
-
10,119
86,211
-
21,414
-
64,787
-
-
2,113
26,808
-
126,511
-
4,088
"
20,161
9,887
«
240
^
11,802
26,000
3,519
-
1,100
10,082
6,981
147,776
40,304
89,837
87,140
98,114
24,849
334,737
10,100
783,190
1,197,040
20,283
104,147
71,769
109,784
50,000
47,887
14,382
181,526
28,274
210,130
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abttract oj Certificates of Cokditiom
, . ,
1
Am*t>.
1
1
1
1
h
1l
Holyoke BrdrMil mod
I^D Worti. . .
IBM.
F«b. I«,
ISH.
^m
•l>,«4t
tI8,Mt
•a,oti
Holyaka Uuhlne Com-
F»b. T,
•rtlb
rua
«MaU
Holjak* PkpcrCam-
P»J
M.r ».
■l>y IT,
MCOOO
r«/)oo
1«,000
»1,I4I
Hol^oke 8DUh Oom-
my.Th
Dm. SI,
oDws.M.
B,Ma
-
1.4T0
TJT
Hollioka W>ni Com-
W.148
1,11S,7»6
wltb
3G1,I0C
r«l
I«4,W0
wlata
»T01
Holyoke Wmtir Power
Oompmny, . . .
Oct. ».
Ort. 11,
1,J00.«»
i.m,SM
Home N«.r«p»p« Fob-
lliblDC Oninpan;,
J«.. IMt
Ju. t.
I0,1X»
-
-
fts,»8a
Tjai
HoHHlidt Etartlo flood.
tJorapuiy, .
Apr. M,
lUr.M,
1».000
48,100
m,ooa
01,010
«o,ooo
«W,DOO
IT^»)0
18,000
wltb
soo
R. B.
W.100
»,oao
10.000
O^pany, Tbe, .
Ht H.
Apr. M,
n,ii4
iSTrnpur, . . .
Aug. 18.
Jnly W.
tafiOi
31,000
ISJWO
10,000
10,000
t,«M
"p^Comp-oy. . "■.
July 14,
Jnu 4.
S,000
8.JW
Fab. 30,
J>D. W,
I&,QOO
»,wo
1.M3
Horn ud Bnpply Oon.-
pMJ.Th., . . .
Auf. U.
JOH »,
SO.O0O
8,6M
100
6,882
6.m
14,008
Honur Uufaino Oau-
PMy.Th
Mw. »,
Fab. 14,
J&.OM
14.S0T
7,BM
IIortDD Akeriay Com.
p.ny.Tl», . . .
Jane o,
Jana 4,
1B.600
11,»>
M4I
""^rss^.
10,000
llowird Broltaen MaD-
uf»ctnrlng Oompuf,
40,000
4M00
3MT0
w,aoo
Compmoy, . . -
Apr. M.
.Apr.lT,
VCB
T&,000
I/»0,W)
Hitsa
10,4»0
»,8»0
S,S40
l»0,4W
Howluid UIIL* Oon»ra-
llOD
D«i.IO,
D*J. 5.
70,tT3
Uoilt llloanl Bo>p
B«pt.»,
: July 10,
B,<X»
MM
1,600
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
133
oj Corporations — Continued.
Abbits— Con.
.-So >
a^ 2 • I
■ 202 9
$14,186
114,225
101,378
25
9,242
20,04«
1,248
48,076
70,117
89,838
21,095
598
14,072
5,479
11,370
4,840
38,271
47,686
6o,ni
8i>2,676
500
3
a
«■
m
1
O
^S
a
Q
s
glj
§
S'g
S
-sS
14
a
s
Liabilities.
$19,681
$1,900
lOO
1,000
10,000
a 262
$18,747
2,149
1,705 166
642
-}
9,480
105
520
1,029
<f 5,011
525
4,862
9,228
73,080
47
15,428
$113,832
682,782
m
3
S
&
Q
n
Q .
ss
I"
m
o
$60,000
300,000
758,519 , 500,000
6,500
6,500
106,001 I 60,000
$53,882
175,814
107,005
1,087
600
12,000
2,259,226
12,326
177,928
449,898
207,282
69,611
6,366
20,789
41,813
48,628
29,751
10,791
132,972
78,404
142,005
2,180,613
15,000
1,200,000
10,000
125,000
400,000
200,000
80,000
5,000
15,000
20,000
26,000
18,500
8,270
45,000
40,000
75,000
1,000,000
6,000
9,000
543 d$525,000
2,826
9,662
6,701
7,232
25,90&
1,166
4,722
17,141
23,628
16,618
2,521
67,439
83,604
53,877
900,344
9,000
c 1,067
«683
$131,202
38,016
1,038
183,683
43,266
8,197
3,706
200
20,633
2,400
4,600
190,269
$75,766
113,498
86,068
350,000
40,000
4,672
2,400
8,718
$113,832
682,782
758,619
6,600
106,091
2,259,226
12,326
177,928
449,898
207,232
69,611
6,366
20,789
41.818
48,628
29,761
10,791
182,972
78,404
142,095
2,180,613
15,000
a Patlenifl. b Special reserve for dam renewal.
d OfDce famlture, patterns and drawings.
c Income account.
fi Subject to vote of directors.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract 0/ Cebtificatbb of Conditioh
a
II
AMn*
"
^-_
rtAUa Of CORPO-
1
1
RATION.
1
Bnb«r PtioUPS Ptm
Compuij, . . .
1«U.
JnD« 1.
■by il.
J
udlopplTOompur,
Nw. I&.
Oct. H.
J
HDllEI«lrio Light ud
Oct. 22. May S.
«,«.
U,K1
.Hb
R.E.
•M.JW
4.SM
[utDrinE (Smpu;, '.
Aai.JT. 1 U>y W,
mjM
302.4W
with
Tfi
HtU*
T«.Mi
HulchlDi Uuhliia Cotn-
JOD. IS,
aUv».
.„
-
S8.T0!
HoWliln.NuTOwF.bric
Feb. M,
aJu. 19.
W,OQO
-
.
.
«,M0
«.tsa
Oompmar. .
j»iy aa,
July 10,
MOO
4J00
•1.000
WM
3.«»
s,«o
HjdBP«kCoi.ip.nr, .
M.y 17,
Apr. 0.
1^,000
.
-
1,81(1
ooa
H7d» Park Vftttr Com-
P»°J
Apr. 20,
Apr. »,
100,000
10.002
wllb
,...
16,000
1,0«1
JDgOomp.By.Th.. .
8.pt.».
J*p. 4,
0,000
.
.
ftWO
Im, But .nd Blih Oom-
p«r.Th.(tel8M)..
Apr. SO.
Not. i*.
1I,«00
UfiOO
1,SM
I«. B.ltuidFlihCam-
p.nj.Th., . . .
D«. 2«.
Not. is.
l^ooo
.
c 20.000
1.081
ImproTHl Dw.tllDga At-
F«b. 17.
aJu.U.
lOOWl
iao.<«7
wHb
R.K.
.
i,ni
'-asr.fT«;t
Ju. 11,
Ju. •,
20.000
11.1K
-
1.206
IndtaAlkMlWorki, .
M.r. 12.
J.n. S,
10.000
ij."
IndU Drag Compidy, .
Jnn. 4,
M.y H.
B,000
-
-
sum
iBdI.D Orshard Com-
f«J
Jul; t.
M.y M,
ia.oaa
iN.Bn
ss,ra
U0.2U
«.TM
20,7SI
IddluOrelurdUIIL., .
Apr. J.
Feb. IS.
B00.000
-
-
-
'WM
lodiutrUI CoopenUTB
F<b. IS.
J«i. 8,
ig.*a)
20,000
.
_
.
V"
lD>l>ntFn«»rConi.
p.ny.The, . . .
Not. •.
ll.y 1.
(.000
-
.
.
Ipi-lch Co*pe™il«
Cnunery CampaoT,
Tb»
Apr. 2T.
Apr. 8,
4,«l»
2.000
200
2,700
1,»0
101
Ipiirleh Qu Light Com-
AIU.23.
Jaly n.
H.I»D
.
3.700
-
1.000
UKS
IpnrldiUltU. . .
Not. N.
Not. 27,
"•••»
100,000
wiib
rMl
'^
¥>tfiX
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
of Corporations — Continned.
135
Abbstb—Ood.
LlABIL
1
1
f
IT1E8.
sis.-
•
S
a
1
•
a
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
■
•
1
OQ
3
6
•
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
1
•
1
$18,084
$88,000
-
$12,898
$»,ao7
$75,000
$24,607
-
-
-
$09,607
8,500
-
-
-
25.815
10,000
14,514
-
$1,801
-
26,815
2,063
-
a $56,775
2,528
145,280
60,000
85,289
-
-
-
145,289
180,390
-
-
400,624
150,000
159,032
-
68,579
$32,013
400,624
1,500
-
27,825
-
114,527
25,000
89,527
-
-
-
114,527
27,107
-
987
-
85,080
40,000
40,064
-
5,016
-
85,080
2,140
-
100
-
18,602
8,000
315
-
8,287
2,000
13,602
4.206
-
50
13,447
19,821
15,000
4,821
-
-
-
19,821
-
-
226,814
-
268,698
1 100,000
104,841
-
-
58,857
263,698
-
-
-
6,700
7,100
6.000
1,100
-
-
-
7,100
62,249
-
cSOO
1,784
21,160
15,000
6,169
-
-
-
21,169
1,074
-
875
1,506
25,488
15,000
10,488
-
-
-
25,488
-
-
-
-
122,518
100,000
17,000
-
5,518
-
122,518
-
-
.
-
22,058
20,000
1,300
-
758
-
22,058
3,090
-
570
-
21,226
20,000
1,226
-
-
-
21,226
14,428
-
602
46,875
5,000
41,876
-
-
-
46,875
80,446
-
-
-
274,087
225,000
44,066
-
5,921
-
274,987
i wlthC.
j ftD.R.
"
-
413,068
429,900
420,900
-
-
-
-
429,900
11,969
<f 1,880
-
88,593
18,420
10,616
« 1,897
j $6,797
148
/716
88,503
1,000
3,000
800
1,800
5,600
5,000
600
-
-
-
5,600
30O '
-
-
-
4,501
4,000
400
-
-
101
4,601
73 i
o 5,100
A 1.800
1 10,830
24,705
16,000
8,705
-
-
-
24,705
40,255^
-
-
-
631,781
400,000
25,955
-
205,826
-
631,781
a Lioee, ete.
e Unpaid dividends.
b Herring, pollock, etc.
/ Sinking fund.
c Steamboat.
g Street mains.
d Fixtures.
h Meters.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certikicates of Cokditiom
J. C. Aysr Comp*
enoB Shm Com*
I. CanaDt CompaDy,
I. Oaoaliisbam
Miy. .
.. H. Harne and
Campaii;, Tlw,
J.H.Loekny Pluio.«ue
"nmpany, .
irapuny, .
, Wmrren Company.
J. L. and T. D. P«k
llimahiclnrlDg Cam-
p"y
ny
. Cmr CompaBy,
. ITfllMD & Son Shoe
mpaoy (for 18B3), .
. NelMD & eoD 8boe
impany, .
-:r..
ISS4
aApt.fr,
»10^
Bept.ie.
June 10.
12,000
July M,
June SB,
300.000
Jan. SI.
Jan. I,
10,000
|[.r. IS.
liar. 6.
20,000
Feb. fi,
Dec. it,
10.000
May 2,
IBM.
Apr. n.
i»,ooo
Mar. H.
Feb. 18.
6.000
Feb. M.
Jan. M.
60,000
Fab. ao.
Jan. 16,
1J6.000
Not. 10.
Oot. 1.
80,000
Feb. IT,
Jan. K.
26.000
Apr. S.
Jan. 1,
30.000
Jnly 6.
Vtb. 0,
100,000
Sept. 10,
Jnly »,
11,000
June W,
June 14,
to,ooo
Jan. 4,
I9B3.
Dec. M.
100,000
Dec. ST.
Dee. 1,
lo^ooo
Jan. 31.
Jan. 2*.
«,ooo
Jan. n.
Jan. 16,
l^ooo
Jan, 20,
Jan. IB.
20.000
Deo. 10,
Nov. 13,
M,000
Aug. ».
June M.
•,»00
May M.
May S.
.«,«»
"^ — 1
i.
i
i
X
»20,000
MMM
1 10,000
a.«o
SS.000
■
18.000
wub
laal
eWate
!J,000
33.000
38.TOT
10.000
1S.1JS
9.M2
0,502
E.E.
80,000
8,760
21,203
8,120
with
R.B.
30,000
ifiOO
28.000
-
Mfieo
28.000
with
R.E.
13,348
with
R.E.
6,208
84301
10,631
18,043
14^T66
1S03'4
0,413
8 A IJ ptopetty tn
le BoatoB tee Company. April 1. 1803.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
137
of Corporationt — Contiuued.
Assets— r Con.
LlABIUTIES.
s'si
illi
•
1
•*
Balance Profit
and LoM.
•
5
Capital Stock, i
•
1
•
8
Balance Profit
and Loea.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
■
3
o
(106,098
-
$102,980
-
$469,971
$10,000
$330,199
-
$229,772
-
$469,971
4,800
-
-
-
18,296
12,000
2,902
-
8,394
-
18,206
408,140
-
9,676
-
554,778
800,000
249,887
-
4,886
554,773
6,515
-
fc
-
49,268
48,000
-
-
-
$1,268
49,268
17,750
-
-
-
85,974
20,000
4,674
-
1,300
-
25,974
6,U1
-
-
15,926
10,000
5,074
-
852
-
15,926
1]2,5«7
-
879
842,879
150.000
119,470
$82,519
-
40,390
342,379
-
5,406
-
14,609
5.000
7,681
-
1,978
-
14,609
17,188
a $10,000
M,500
-
64,641
50,000
11,641
-
3,000
-
64,641
21,602
-
-
-
185,900
125,000
59,501
-
609
-
185,200
34,913
1,749
-
84,558
80,000
46,002
-
8,556
-
84,558
24,606
-
-
-
32,929
25,000
7,638
-
291
-
32,929
58,557
-
4,896
-
102,456
80,000
71,828
-
1,183
-
102,456
126.968
«rith
li.M.
andS.
in P.
( -
280,745
100,000
148,268
-
17,477
-
260,745
44,024
-
c 1,620
-
86,197
14,000
64,792
405
17,000
86,197
14,584
-
-
-
52,027
40,000
10,912
-
1,115
-
52,027
44.434
-
-
p
251,180
100,000
151,189
-
-
-
251,189
56,881
-
-
-
250,755
100,000
150,765
-
-
-
250,755
29,432
-
-
-
62,188
40,000
1,196
-
8,082
S d 5,800
i € 6,210
62,188
5,835
6,000
302
-
22,122
15,000
757
-
1,215
5,150
22,122
39,900
-
-
60,795
20,000
21,084
-
-
9,761
50,795
30,494
-
-
-
62,979
40,000
22,979
-
-
-
62,979
729
8,013
119
-
7,660
6,300
418
-
951
-
7,669
-
-
$40,400
42,000
42,000
-
-
-
-
42,000
a And patterns.
d Ob baildinga.
b Bnlldlngs and fixtures on leased land.
« On machinery.
c Small tooMv
138
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abttraet of CBitnnoATES of CSondition
When Certificate was
Filed.
as
1
1
Capital Stock as fixed
by the Corporation.
AMBTt.
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
•
1
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
&
a
i
0
PQ
•
3
Jamea Ramage Paper
Company, .
1894
Oct. SI,
1894
Oct. S6,
$85,000
$48,000
$18,000
$30,000
$87,000
•88,883
Jamea Raaaell Boiler
Works Company,
Feb. 8,
Jan. 23,
10,000
-
-
-
6»422
8,663
Jameson and Knowlea
Company, .
June 19,
M^r. 20,
60,000
-
•
-
11,541
0,500
Janris Engineering Com-
pany, ....
Aug. 31,
July 23,
100,000
-
-
-
-
81,800
Jenkins Bfannfaoturing
Corporation,
Feb. 10,
Jan. 20,
50.000
27,000
with
R.E.
42,025
10,704
Jenney Mnnnfaotnrlng
Company, The, .
Mar. 6,
Jan. 9,
75,000
50,435
with
R.B.
87,265
40,985
Jesse Eddy Manufactur-
ing Company, The, .
June 1,
May 31,
• 60,000
-
•
-
4,689
104,882
Jewett Lumber Com-
pany, ....
Apr. 9,
Mar. 22,
75,000
•
-
0 20,000
10,000
57,207
Jewett Piano Company,
May 16,
Feb. 12,
20,000
12,895
6,470
7,426
18,008
John C. DeLaney Mould-
ing Company,
Feb. SO,
1898.
Deo. 26,
5,000
.
-
-
4,018
9,407
John C. Maclnnes Com-
pany, ....
Mar. 1,
1894.
Feb. 13,
100,000
..
-
90,094
John B. Brown Manu-
facturing Company,
The, ....
Apr. 4,
Feb. 27,
16,000
.
^
16,000
6,488
John L. Whiting and
Bon Company, .
Ang. 23,
Jnly 17,
800,000
.
-
58,000
201,482
John P. Lovell Arms
Company, .
May 11,
6 Apr .18,
ll!5,000
-
.
-
102,251
John P. Squire and Com-
pany, Corporation, .
Dec. 10,
6 Nov. 6,
200,000
•
-
756,740
John Pilling Shoe Com-
pany, ....
July 11,
Mar. 2,
10,000
•
-
-
4,000
67^98
John Rhodes Warp
Company, .
July 11,
June 30,
100,000
86,170
with
R.B.
88.880
18,445
John Robbins Nfanufact-
urlng Co., Tho, .
June 1,
Jan. 15,
10.000
.
.
-
6,101
1.3«
John Russell Cutlery
Company, .
July 25,
July 18,
300,000
200,000
-.
70,000
75,486
John 8. Wolfe Company,
Tho, ....
Jan. 22.
Jan. 1,
10,000
.
-
-
26,839
John Wales Company, .
Aug. 16,
July 25,
160,000
-
-
-
-
81,091
JohnAon Manufacturing
Company, .
Aug. 0,
July 13,
250,000
178,434
-
-
296,512
71.130
Joseph Breck & Sons'
Corporation,
Feb. 9,
1893.
Not. 8,
125,000
-
-
-
el6,U0
160,806
a Equity. b Adjourned.
c Fixtures, furniture. Improvements, patent and copy righta, leases and good-will.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
139
of Corporations — Continued.
Assvn^Oon.
Liabilities.
•
illi
34
•
3
1
a
3
•
•
P
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
3
0
1
1
Capital Stock.
■
3
1
1
Balance Profit
and Lobs.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
3
$44,908
-
-
-
$165,130
$86,000
$60,900
-
$29,286
$165,136
2,8m
-
-
-
17,864
10,000
2,162
$6,702
-
-
17,864
81.106
-
-
$25,073
127,220
60,000
67,220
-
-
127,220
U,177
$60,000
$20,206
6,079
118,824
100,000
18,824
-
-
-
118,824
85,675
-
a 4,800
-
120,104
60,000
4,047
-
66,057
-
120,104
20,008
-
-
-
157,638
76,000
77,848
-
5,285
-
157,633
83,619
-
-
21,940
215,130
60,000
166,180
-
-
-
215,130
107,088
-
11,062
-
205,822
76,000
112,808
-
17,619
-
205,322
21,216*
-
5,290
299
62,762
20,000
82,762
-
-
-
52,762
5,845
J
-
1,680
-
20,946
5,000
10,062
-
3,383
$2,600
20,945
120,316
-
12,663
-
153,572
100,000
46,003
-
-
7,560
163.572
5,U0
-
-
-
26,647
16,000
9,268
-
1,879
-
25,647
257,210
-
-
-
614,722
800,000
211,496
-
-
3,226
514,722
248,501
-
-
-
410,762
126,000
271,872
-
13,880
410,752
1,004 A»8
-
85,000
-
1,797,743
200,000
1,680,799
-
16,944
-
1.797,743
50,885
-
-
•
120,878
10,000
106,078
-
-
4,800
120,878
13,120
-
2,887
-
102,962
100,000
2,696
-
267
-
102,952
1,0»
-
w
2,297
11,889
10,000
1,389
-
-
-
11,389
218,664
-
-
-
564,000
300,000
-
-
264,000
-
564,000
4,770
-
6200
-
80,318
10,000
4,898
e6,364
d 1,000
7,066
1,000
30,318
8,072
-
99,522
-
183,686
160,000
31,648
-
2,087
-
183,685
142,142
-
-
-
688,218
125,000
486,307
-
66,911
10,000
688,218
181,776
-
« 8,000
-
806,781
126,000
162,167
-
-
19,624
306,781
a Forty-«lght aharea capital stock.
d Dividend.
b Horse and fixtures, etc. c J. 8. Wolfe.
^ And stock of other corporations held In trust.
ANNUAL REIGNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abatraet of Cbrtimcatss of Cokditioh
Judd Paper Oompmoji
irn, LiDcolD uil
II Bro1b«ri Ci
King PhUlp mill,
Ivl Daley Expnaa OcMnr
pany, . . . .
KInaley Itod and Ma-
eti In* Company. .
Kltioo Machlss Cm
p«ny. .
Kulgbti of LaborCo-ap-
] Usdlclna
t. ■
. May God
Jum la,
Ua)' la.
Aof. IS,
JdIj i,
No*. 10,
Jnly
Jan. U,
1W3.
tTo*. U,
Jana 29,
Oat. 29,
M.OOO
100,000
ft,MO
1,000,000
t>lT,lM
Jan. 10, U,
And ottxr awWa.
t
^
If
*2.I»
•B.OK
-
S«,0«l
n,ooo
R.E.
<T.««
tioo
11,000
-
R.K.
»«,01S
W.TTS
Ml*
M.IM
-
IJW
-
10,180
M.SW
R.S.
10,000
■ in,m
lg,IOT
«T,OTS
»JM
-
no
R.E.
1,MO,000
02,S«1
iei,sM
nal
•atete
4 1MW
0,000
M,«19
\n,M
1M.T90
S00.W3
M
-
3,10t
«,fll»
T,M0
•^
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
Ul
0/ Corporations — Continaed.
AMBT8 — OOD.
2-3
p
0
s
I
g .
2^
s
o
H
4,672
106,838
20,871
885
17,535
29,748
63,060
326,702
♦1.600
1,728
2,200
16,000
2,007
a 10,000
with cash and d*btf rr cVable
54,430
$5,000
2,800
11,172
5,9-24
8,000
9,029
349,048 ' 100,000
1,000
40,473
12,186
6488
07,045
/1.705
S ^1,700
( 8,178
$48,570
22,955
$25,887
132,000
79,282
14,725
530,122
69.797
60,464
100,328
220,324
LIABILITIB8.
I
3
I
(3
s
Profit
M.
1
» .
u a
0 0
85
Aq
s >~
«8 *
S o<
oq
()4
5
o
$15,000
100,000
24,000
16,000
350,000
I 25,000
40,000
100,000
80,000
125,889 100,000
5,010
2,330,440
5.600.
1,000,000
10,000 10,000
326,798
318,974
18,853
200,000
150,000
8,270
71,497 50,000
18,858
1,222,088
5,000
000,000
1,925 1,925
1,000
90,746
20,215
5,000
85,000
15,000
$9,545
22,000
55,282
21,440
10,404
7,732
64,270
22,804
709,163
22,823
3,000
c 1,160
3,874
21,497
13,858
79,080
$842
10,000
$186kl22
50,000
l( with
18,367 |< bal.
?P.&L.
$86,054
1,506
3,035
110
521,283
30,000
d 8,678
34,806
11,215
62,818
135,974
1,606
100,000
41,162
$25,387
132,000
79,282
16,000
536,122
> 59,797
. 50,464
109,328
220,824
126,339
5,610
2,330,446
10,000
326,798
318,974
26,940
e 375 , 13,853
71,497
543,608
18,868
1,222,688
l,92r>
5,000
96,746
26,215
a Peraonal property.
f Sinking fund.
b Fixtures.
/ Piping, etc.
c IxMna and Interest.
ff Treasury stock.
d Beeerve dividend.
142
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
I
P 9
C
I
L. M. Harris Manafact-
uring Company, .
L. Spragne Company, .
L. W. Pond Machine
Company, .
Lady Grey Perfumery
Company, .
Lagoon Pond Company
In Dukes County,
Lake Williams Ice Com-
pany, The, .
Lakeside Manufacturing
Company, .
Lambeth Rope Company,
Lamprey Boiler Furnace
Mouth Protector Com-
pany, ....
Lamson and Goodnow
Manufacturing Com-
pany, ....
Lancaster Manufactur-
ing Company,
Lancaster Mills,
Lancaster Slate Com-
pany, ....
Lancaster Water Com-
pany
LanesvUle Granite Com-
pany, . . . .
Lang & Jacobs Com-
pany, . . . .
Langdon Mitre Box Com-
pany (for 1893), .
Langdon Mitre Box Com-
pany, . . . .
Laurel Lake Mills,
Lawrence Duck Com-
pany
Lawrence Flyer and
Spindle Works, .
Lawrence G as Company ,
1894.
Mar. 2e
Mar. 20
Mar. 6
July 26
May 11
June 9
May 7
Apr. 12
Oct. 22
Aug. 6
Mar. 24
Dec. 24
Feb. 27
June 14
Mar. 9
Nov. 16
Jan. 10
Nov. 16
Oct. 24
July 11
Jan. 27
Feb. 15
1894.
Feb. 14,
Feb. 21,
Jan. 9,
June 18,
Feb. 21,
May 7,
> Mar. 81,
i Apr. 4,
a Oct. 17,
July 31,
Mar. 19,
Dec. 12,
Jan. 6,
Apr. 4,
Jan. 29,
Oct. 1,
1893.
Oct. 81,
1894.
Oct. 26,
Oct. 16, i
June 26,
Jan. 24,
$120,000
40,000
30,000
5,000
500
8,000
30,000
126,000
12,600
381,600
26,000
1,200,000
100,000
60,000
60,000
6,000
20,000
20,000
400,000
300,000
60,000
AesKTS.
■
5
1
and W
Power.
i
a
6
3
Real:
Land
ter
Build
1
Cash
$68,807
I
36,835 ' with
Feb. 6, , 500,000
$300
20,321 with
76,000
20,000
865,000
16,000
147,432
212,859
64,229
I c 628,696
with
with
with
10,000
21,700
R.B.
R.B.
$53,755
$60,679
16,166
37,300
$6,066
16,190
S,S07
•97
880
2,700
11,978 ; 12,407
67,.')25 6,2M
R.B.
R.B.
real
6,000
24,073 123,859
with
R.E.
80,440 14,789
with I real
2,079
66,044
17,000
estate
21,000
9,894
0,907
38,335
4,SftS
341,197
863
863
S ».®o^
3,203
1,78S
943
367,616 32,300
100,000
1,600
eeUte
55,446
6,0SS
4A,440
a Adjourned.
b Notes receivable.
c Gas account.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
143
of CorporaHoM — Continued.
A88KTS — Con.
Liabilities.
2 .
i 8^
1 ^s
1
Reserve for De-
preciation. '
1
Manufactures,
Materials and
Btock in Proo*
es«.
Patent RlghU.
MIscellaneons.
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Total.
•
•8
2
I
3
•
•s
1
♦58.281
1
^
^
$172,412
$120,000
$18,470
$24,379
$9,563
$172,412
13.300
-
-
-
81,400
40.000
28,623
-
12,867
-
81,490
18.222
1
1
-
t28.186
82,106
30,000
52.105
-
-
-
82,106
61.365
-
-
-
62.862
6,000
47.362
-
-
-
52,362
-
1
a$600
-
600
600
-
-
-
-
600
3.200
1,400
400
8,880
8,000
880
-
-
8,880
36.775
-
-
81,476
80,000
61,003
473
~
£1,476
-
-
-
-
117,660
107,560
10,000
-
_
117,560
2,788
$2,600
-
8,611
22,786
12,600
10,286
-
-
-
22,785
131.282
-
1,160
6261.210
672,060 j
300,000
c 81,600
j 76,660
<2 114,800
-
572,960
8,162
-
-
40,660
26,400
22,495
-
1,655
-
49,550
686,079
withj
M. a1. M.
&8.inP.
1 -
1,702,176
1,200,000
400,000
$192,176
with
reserves
1,792,176
600
-
« 3,663
70,471
110,648
100,000
10,643
110,643
-
/ 42.000
-
42,000
20,000
20,000
-
2,000
-
42,000
8.668
•
^10,400 )
A 8,600 } -
i200 )
80,733
60,000
29,605
7,988
2,140
-
89.788
6.066
800
-
9,068
5,000
1,674
-
2,404
-
9,068
8,262
10,000
i»,Wl
-
21,814
20,000
655
-
-
1,289
21,814
2.664
it 10,000
i».»01
20,871
20,000
-
-
371
-
20,871
161.619
-
-
-
608,857
400,000
194,995
-
103.862
-
608,857
83,107
-
-
-
461,412
300,000
100,000
-
61,412
-
451,412
1,640
.
1,100
12,607
77,264
50.000
27,254
-
-
77,264
36,727
n04.681
ml36k648
1 -
1
■ 863,041
1
1
690,000 1
71125,000/
' 0 40,000^
1
1 q 17^700
( r 3,126
77,167
■"
853,041
a Dam and dyke creek. b Old. c Preferred stock.
/ RigbU, fraochlsea and plant. g Vessel property,
i Tools and fixtares. k And good -will,
m Edison electric plant. n Ten year five per cent, bonds.
p Deposits. 7 Dividend three per cent.
d New. s ConsirncUon.
A Surplus of 1892. i Tesms.
/ Electric constraetlon.
o Notes payable.
r Interest on five per cent, bonds.
144 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abatract of Cebtificates of Conditiok
NAME OP CORPO-
RATION.
When Certificate was
Filed.
•
6S
a
1
o
1
CapiUl Stock as fixed
by the Corporation .
A88XT8.
--
•
1
$31,000
Land and Wa.
ter Power.
•
.s
2
D
OQ
Machinery.
1.
A3
If
f^wrcnce Ice Company,
1804.
May 4,
1894.
Apr. 3,
$76,000
•14,000
$17,000
$2,801
Lawrence Improvement
Company, . .
Aug. 10,
Mar. 28,
45,000
39,500
6.949
83,661
$7,000
263
Lawrence Line Com-
pany
Oct. 8,
Oct. 5,
25,000
_
.
_
18,682
•
804
Lawrence Lumber Com-
pany, ....
Jan. 24,
Jan. 16,
54,000
13,900
10,900
3,000
4,000
61,665
Lawrence Machine Com.
pany, ....
Jan. 29,
Jan. 0,
50,000
_
_
^
81.294
12,205
Lawrence Manufactur-
ing Company, .
June 25,
June 12,
1,500,000
626,688
with
R.E.
373,362
755.768
Lawrence Shuttle Com-
pany
B'eb. 24,
Feb. 20,
5,000
.
^
^
^^
.
Lawrence Spool and
Bobbin Company, The,
Feb. 24,
Feb. 20,
5,000
.
^
^
^
.
L e a V i 1 1 Machine Co.,
The, ....
Aug. 18,
July 10,
10,000
..
»
^
6,355
14,782
Lee Creamery Co-opera-
tive Association, The,
June 14,
Mar. 31,
3,500
^
^
400
^
89
Lee Electric Company, .
Sept 27,
July 10,
20,000
9,000
6,900
2,100
63,268
1,144
Leicester Electric Com-
pany
Dec. 21,
July 0,
25,000
11,880
With
R.E.
19,456
1.627
Leicester Hotel Com-
pany, The, .
Jan. 22,
Jan. 16,
25,000
7,000
1,600
5,500
^
Leicester Water Power
Company, .
May 1,
1893.
Dec. 27,
2,000
.
1,700
_
«.
»
Lenox Water Company,
Oct. 15,
1894.
a Sept.15,
82,000
2,925
with
R.B.
4.600
1,T23
Leominster Electric
Light and Power Com-
pany, The, .
Nov. 28,
b
60,000
11,707
2,482
9,275
49,718
4,71.'>
Leominster Oas Light
Company, .
Leominster Bhirt Com-
pany
Feb. 14,
Mar. 17,
Feb. 18,
Feb. 1,
50,000
61,000
18,000
with
R.E.|
300
14,968 1
e22/»7
24,531
J 1.347^
! <fl.200 S
40,317
•
Leominster Worsted
Company, .
Dec. 10,
Nov. 5,
50,000
42,098
with
R.E.
55,933
16,550
Lewis J. Bird Company,
May 10,
Mar. 9,
5,000
-
-
-
-.
5,000
1 •
Lewis Wharf Company,
May 14,
Apr. 2,
500',000
0 600,000
with
R.B.
1 26,388
LexiDKlon Buildings As-
eociutlon,
June 22,
Apr. 19,
200,000
186,000
with
R.E.
^
14,000
Lexington Oas Light
Cuiiipaoy, .
Aug. 18,
July 17,
30,000
6,617
""
00,205
3,R40
a Adjourned.
d Town note.
b Noth
0 And c
eld; statei
locks and J
nent of Jul
improveme
y 1, 1894.
nt«.
ei
Street mai
ma and rae
tera.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
of Corporations — Continued.
AMm-Con.
J
•7S,.
LUBlLITUa.
1
1
1.
11
1
-
T
atAlfiK
|e,T»
•81.010
.
-
-
'
».7«
' 30.
>
»»««
1B.1H
SI,M»
1 "^'
r
M.TM
1.1)00
1M.BC8
j M.000
l».Mi
•il.,1,
»io,ooo
116,303
„,«.
•^ooo
a.m
i5,m
e8,0K
1 60,000
,.,«
-
-
»,M2
IMI.U8
-
M37,SM
;i,»o.ooo
024,8611
-
M.SJ,
«2B,238
3.1S7,39«
8.123
m
8.011
B,M1
S0.3M
10,000
»,soo
-
7,181
c 16,000
46.S03
t ■
8.3M
28,380
3,S0«
80,303
m
-
11,02
aw
£2.104
»,«.]
•I'S
1 -
-
-
61,204
-
MO
-
T.SQO
»/N»
8,000
-
-
-
28,000
-
-
-
1,700
l.TOO
-
-
1,700
-
-
if(T,ni
83.
n.Bi»
a^oooj
■! 30,000
{••s.Ua
-
87,316
B-t
lO/MO
•3.710
140.731
scow
80,224
1,407
"
140,121
'
-
6s,ai»
KKOOO
3,828
63,328
«.Me
m
1U,0OT
81,000
80,888
/1.201
-
143,061
ttws
1S7.404
ifiW
73,480
•2,476
1,600 ; 167,484
.
-
-
BS8.3e»
»,«.
60,000
76,888 j
•"i*»'-iJ6«,3M
-
-
-
100,000
-••»
- ! 200.000
1
-;.»
-
72,144
80,000
1B,M»
wn
1
72,1 44
146
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
•
m
^
5
•
8
a
mm
ra
1»
9
o^
%4
a «
1^
1
^
a
Lexington Print Works,
The
Lexington Water Com-
pany, . . . .
Liberty Maionlo Asaoci-
ation, • • . .
Library Bureau, .
Lincoln Wharf Com-
pany, . . . .
Linden Paper Co., The,
Litchfield Shuttle Com-
pany, The, .
Locks Pond Reservoir
Company, .
Lock wood Manufactur-
ing Company, The, .
Logan, Swift and Brig-
ham Envelope Com-
pany, . . . .
Long Pond Fishing Com-
pany, . . . .
Loring and Blake Organ
Company, .
Lovell Arms and Cycle
Company, .
Lovett, Hart and Phlpps
Company, .
Low Art Tile Company,
The, . . . .
Lowell Bleachery, .
Lowell Co-operative As-
sociation, Sovereigns
of Industry,
Lowell Co-operatlveMlIk
Association,
Lowell Courier Publish-
ing Company, The, .
Lowell Electric Light
Corporation, The,
Lowell Oas Light Com-
pany
Lowell Hosiery Com-
pany
Lowell Iron Company, .
1804.
June 26,
June 28
June 20
Aug. 2
Feb. 8
Feb. 15
Mar. 7
Sept. 21
Apr. 0
Mar. 22
Jan. 18
Jan. 30,
May 10
Jan. 10
Oct. 23
July 25
Apr. 10
Dec. 15
Apr. 30
May 2
Sept. 6,
May 28
July 30,
1894.
May 7,
a May 14,
Mar. 31,
July 8,
Jan. 18,
Jan. 31,
a Mar. 6,
Ang. 7,
a Jan. 14,-
Feb. 12,
1893.
Deo. 30,
1894.
Jan. 8,
a Mar. 14,
Jan. 5,
Sept. 3,
July 10,
Jan. 23,
a Dec. 1,
1893.
Dee. 4,
1894.
Feb. 7,
July 30,
Feb. 5,
Mar. 17,
3"
$37,000 j' $28,106
60,000 > 14,007
ASBBTS.
5
9
fee
1
_ 0
So
i
a
*a b
•a
^S
1
•J
A !
•
a
S
II
16,200
60,000
150,000
400,000
21,000
2,000
300,000
100,000
863
25,000
6,000
40,000
250,000
16,350
187,459
550,000
9,150
1,000
56,824
67,087
16
$12,500 , $10,606
with
8,800
R.S.
13,050
$20,463
6,591
6,496
with real estate
2,900 , 6,250
88,000 18,824
15,278 ; 51,809
60
58,002
400,000 ,' 454,765
I
15,000
25,000
15,000
800,000
500,000
200,000
15,000
13,192
503,673
58,554
I
15.000 88,902
with real
lpT58 I
I
6,892 6,300
6,600
64,411
$7,191
I.ITO)
6 6.848 i
687
29,440
48,M7
157,721
0,360
20
9,121
75,000
20,332
27,070
c 518,673
38,222
59,096
eatote
1,065
8,500
210,940
85,000
51,826
72,522 I 58,964
25,998
967
65,689
126,804
57,835
11,447
5,704
8,370
17.950
7,839
16,125
6,243
a Adjourned.
b Sinking fund.
c And works.
1894.1
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
147
of Corporations — Continued.
ASSSTS^COD.
OD
Liabilities.
«•
•
9
49
o o
S
.2
9 m
Debta.
t
1
o
a-
Reserv
preci
■
3
$87,000
$S0,841
1«,200 I
160,000 I 62,000
400,000
21,000
1,068 ' 2,000
300,000
100,000
863
25,000
8,800
1
10,765
1
236,012
22,607
-
71,830
088
45,240
U.863;
-
-
-
11,460 , 6,000
91,710 1 1 40,000
844,607 I 260,000
580,521 I 400,000
10,900
21,430
501,746 I
624,200 I
227,732
21,096
25,000
15,000
300,000
500,000
200,000
15,000
452,109
3,108
(f 60
124,176
210,184
226
11,350
6,094
61,719
70,804
120,000
2,681
7,817
5,430
176,178
18,000
27,782
4,464
$8,762
$67,841
128,576
837 ' - 17,037
$1,479 I 105,432
1,362
21,785
21,182
14,708
19,521
5,025
24,006 236,006
- I 853,471
I
45,843
2,060
424,176
310,184
1,089
57,532
I
356 ' 11,450
I
I
- I 91,719
344,507
I
- I 639,521
3,275
1,000
25,573
111,209
1,642
21,881
32,817
21,430
601,746
624,209
227,732
21,096
a Water aerrlee, pipe, cte.
6 Bonds.
c Special stock.
d Unpaid tax.
148
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894,
Abstract of Certificates op Condition
NAME OP CORPO-
RATION.
s
^
^
m
3
5
Certlfi
1.
«
«4
S^
o
1
•^6
M O
ai
o
35
I
3'
Lowell Machine Sbop, .
Lowell Manufacturing
Company* .
Lowell Wadding and
Paper Company,
Lowell Waate Company,
Ludlow Cordage Com-
pany (for 1808), .
Ludlow Cordage Com-
pany, . . > •
Ludlow Manufacturing
Company (for 1893), .
Ludlow Manufacturing
Company, .
Lyman Mills, . . #
Lyman Smith's Sons,
Company, .
Lynn Box Company, .
Lynn District Messenger
and Telegraph Com-
pany, The, .
Lynn Qas and Electric
Company, .
Lynn Ice Company, The,
Lynn Pearl Button Com-
pany, The, .
Lyons and Alexander
Company, The, .
M. E. Shattuck Cigar
and Tobacco Com-
pany, The, .
M. M. Rhodes & Sons
Co>, • . • •
M. Strickland Incorpo-
rated, • • • •
Macdonald Printing
Company, .
Magee Furnace Com-
pany, ....
Maiden and Melrose Gas
Light Company, .
Maiden Electric Com-
pany, The, .
1804.
June 11
Feb. 3
July 20
Apr. 0
Jan. 8
Deo. 31
Jan. 8
Dec. 20
Feb. 0
Aug. 17
Deo. 10
June 7
Jan. 23
June 11
Jan. 6
May 8
Feb. 2
Nov. 16
Apr. 10
Apr. 27
Apr. 6
Mar. 24
Aug. IS
1804.
June 11,
Jan. 17,
June 7,
Feb. 10,
180S.
Dec. 10,
1804.
Dec. 18,
1803.
Deo. 10,
1804.
Dee. 18,
Feb. 7,
July 20,
Oct. 4,
Feb. 20,
Jan. 22,
May 24,
1808.
Deo. 1,
1804.
Apr. 16,
Jan. 15,
Nov. 13,
Jan. 0,
(2Mar.21,
Jan. 10,
Jon. 31,
July 18,
$000,000
2,000,000
60,000
40,000
100,000
100,000
500,000
750,000
1,470,000
150,000
11,000
5,000
400,000
100,000
10,000
10,000
15,000
80,000
15,000
8,000
400,000
220,000
250,000
Assets.
i
•
•
m
eS
&>
m
-£
a
"2 *-
■o
«
OS
•^m
s
3"
a
a
« 9
o
$840,000
600,000
40,208
26,000
$145,000 >
with
31,053
140,000 with
140,000
652,000
86,060
287,086
61,600
with
with
•with
$106,000 $60,000
( I 708.026
R.B. I a250
(' 6 60,326
$506,535
821
.026 )
,000 , } 248,82
^8 )
15,150
1,100
757
00,000
R. E. 160.000
R.E.
R. B.
R. S.
with
R. E.
100,260
308,770
27,527
15,000
with
6.000
real
21,527
818,000
38,050
11,297
6,500
« 2,510
eaUte
/322,834
545
15,965
25,331
50,000 96,707
198,377
160,000 448,153
886,216
47,983
9,732
e 362,022
61,199
9oo;
18.701
3.8S5
1
1.734
3,544
17,9U3
13,:»31
- ' 55,71'
2,0u9
26,000 268,118
32,1 :*>
16,640
a New Brussels mill and machinery. b New spinning mill and machinery. c Mains and Uoes.
d Adjourned. « And furnishings, type, etc. / Electric, steam, wires, pole^ etc.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
149
of OorporatUma — Continued.
AB8ST8— Con.
1
LlABIUTIBS.
llli
•
s
1
•
m
1
3
Balance Profit
and Lou.
1
•
JM
1
CD
i
•
1
*
1
Balance Profit
and Lou.
J p.
•
$9M,41«
-
$8,004
-
$
1,212,056
$900,000
$27,319
$
al25,992
1 ftl06,695
$285,686
-
1,212,955
1,609;S88
-
-
-
3,646,556
2,000,000
1,258,894
54,075
-
8,545,666
-
$68
-
$61,976
99,887
60,000
49,887
••
-
-
99,887
i.oars
-
-
-
45,786
40,000
6,292
-
448
-
46,785
181,071
-
-
267,802
100,000
145,823
-
11.479
-
267,802
81,742
9,000
-
287,449
100,000
135,740
-
1,700
-
287,449
690,185
-
-
-
1,148,512
500,000
641,898
-
7.114
-
1,148,512
222,778
-
-
-
970,926
760,000
194,138
-
26,708
-
970,926
878,808
-
-
-
2,486,019
1,470,000
761.711
-
208»308
-
2,435,010
288,008
-
261
-
861,882
150,000
211,882
-
w
-
861,882
7,868
-
1,000
-
29,692
11,000
9,211
-
2,667
$6,814
29,602
-
-
3,700
1,600
6,800
6,000
800
-
-
-
6,800
28,904
16,000
-
-
780,251
400,000
209,812
••
117,187
12.262
730.261
7,886
-
80,204
-
128,241
100,000
25,218
8,023
-
128,241
4,788
-
-
2,094
12,448
10,000
2,448
-
-
-
12,448
5.n6
-
-
741
10,000
10,000
-
-
-
-
10,000
18,476
-
-
218
86,497
15,000
21,497
-
-
-
86,497
11.082
-
-
-
46,963
80,000
1,258
-
6,710
9,000
46,968
-
-
1,447
-
57,165
15,000
42,165
-
-
-
57,166
4,876
-
e52
8,700
18,245
3,000
10,245
-
-
-
13,245
106,000
12,000
49,400
-
570,768
400,000
101,250
-
-
60,518
570,768
6,440
-
d 2,019
-
848,402
220,000
41.471
-
74,806
« 12,625
348,402
4,648
85.000
5,266
-
411,309
155,J00 j
/lOO.OOO
129.855
j
26,844
-
411,800
a Onaranty.
d TazM.
b Insurance.
€ Premiums on atook sold.
c Unexpired insurance.
f Bonds.
150
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
s
^
s
M
8
a
9
1
si
•5
1=
a
00
5
3l
Maldeo Mail Company,
The, . . « .
Maiden News Company,
The, . . . .
Maiden Odd Fellows'
Hall Association,
Manson Building Com-
pany, The, .
Mannfacturers' Qas
Light Company, .
Marblehead Building As-
sooiation,
Marblehead Oas and
Electric Light Com-
pany, . . . .
Marblehead Neck Club
Stable Company, The,
Marblehead Water Com-
pany, . • . .
Marlboro Awl ft Needle
VyO>, * • • •
Marlborough Building
Association,
Marlborough Electric
Company, .
Marlborough Gas Light
Company, .
Marlborough Times Pub-
lishing Company,
Marshpee Manufactur-
ing Company,
Marston and Converse
Company, .
Mason and Hamlin Or-
gan and Piano Com-
pany, . . . .
Mason Machine Works,
Mason Machine Works
(2d return), .
Mason Regulator Com-
pany
Masonic Building Asso-
ciation, . . . .
Masnachusetts Cotton
Mills, . . . .
18M.
Apr. 2S
June 18
May 2
Feb. 2
Aug. IS
May 2
Feb. 20
Feb. 7
May 81
Mar. 31
Aug. 14
Sept. 4
Oct. 2
June 19
Aug. 27
June 7
Feb 16
Jan. 4
Dec. 24
July 12
Mar. 12,
Feb. 14,
1808.
Nov. 16,
18M.
Jan. 17,
Jan. 1,
Jan. 10,
July 81,
Feb. 7,
Jan. 26,
1808.
Dee. 16,
1804.
May 2,
Mar. 27,
July 16,
July 0,
Aug. 22,
Mar. 12,
Aug. 16,
May 15,
Jan. 31,
1808.
Dec. 19,
1804.
Dec. 18,
May 24,
Feb. 6,
Jan. 22,
$6,000
5,000
25,000
80,000
50,000
25,000
40,000
2,400
100,000
8,000
60,000
30,000
50,000
5,000
26,000
40,000
600,000
600,000 I
600,000
6,000
100,000
64,264
25,725
8,025
2,400
17,200
75»208
28,257
24,800
16,500
200,000
200,000
160,329
1,800.000 033,000
$14,841
8,000
1,725
with
with
with
»,703
with
15,000
155,000
with
10,000
40,428
46,805
24,000
R.E.
R.E.
R.E.
45,500
R.E.
a $2,314
\ with )
i bMdg's S
10,000
84,708
5218,286
2,862
e 86,056
70,188
600
6,777
R. E.
37,706
200,000
216,808
18,108
202.000 731,000
867,000
$2,061
1,141
847
440
8,914
124
1,541
100
830
8,181
1,873
11,000
8,300
aoo
47,804
457,03$
305,940
182,151
9,932
TS3
$41,668
a And type, etc.
b And pipes laid and easements.
c And lines and lampa.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
151
q/ CorporcUions — Continued.
AssBra— OoD.
-■2«
3"Sd
133
if
M
s
I
Oh
•
ca
s
s .
s
A<S
a
o
^
8>J
1
11
S
n
tS70
ft $8,000
S,022
1,474
4,&6«
83.078
303,043
33S,002
a04,4d0
17,115
&8M46
2,078
5,000
8,115
2,315
a $500
881
8,818
1,788
1,781
2,506
23,842
085
4fi0
20,863
87,300
28,076
670
$4,468
11,406
518
1,250
9,500
25,872
3
o
H
$16,445
6,75ft
10,347
68,031
58,080
37,612
48,390
2,400
246,050
8,275
102,816
111,551
110,087
5,000
25,300
106,602
055,763
1,080,242
860,476
48,140
170,112
3,228,524
LIABII.ITIB8.
00
I
6
a
t
$5,000
$10,938
5,000
1,600
8,925
-
30,000
85,487
50,000
-
25,000
12.600
40,000
8,390
2,400
100,000
8,000
60,000
80,000
50,000
5,000
25,000
40,000
500,000
600,000
600,000
5,000
76,000
146,960
275
48,e64-
72,292
23,749
8
to
8 .
4 a
9
1^
$600
300
61,087
114,123
462,289
260,476
13,705 d 14,927
79,162
$12
153
1,422
2,544
8,989
112
3,652
9,259
36,338
1,800,000 1,018,970 262,000
340,747
17,958
7,463
152,554
$7,660
c898
o
7,045
e 14,950
$16,445
6,753
10,347
68,081
' 58,989
37,612
48,890
2,400
246,950
8,275
102,816
111,551
110,087
5,000
25.800
108,602
955,763
1,080,242
860,476
48,140
170,112
3,228,524
a Good-will.
d Balance.
6 Franchiee.
e Premium account.
c Marloe iDsorance.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Ckktipicates of Condition
PloahOomp
HmHubuatu
UUOKIII ICuDfHiuri Dg
llanrlck Wharf Oom.
IXiyo Mnl CoiDpuif ,
UoCarty, BhMhy si
■oiwIdudQIllOom-
I£ir. 23,
tUr II,
II ■; 18,
Sspt.U,
6«pl. ID,
Ju. 10,
ss,ooo
100,000
M,000
]M,«00
B2,MM
IM^MO
90,000
40,000
0,000
it/wo
10,000
u,ooo
16,000
»,000
*iw
1
ii
• 1(>,2H
• 14,000
•T/M
«n,iii
n^u
8t,MS
M.010
00,000
wllb
nil
MUM
1S,4M
8S1
•rllh
K.S.
-1
lT,a0T,
mfi7«
9JM
S4,on
ttjm
MM
njtw
wllb
R.B.
ss,«i
10«W
148.000
with
as.
1.411
4I,*M
A300
S,KIT
i.m
IM
a.«»
000
t.w
(ia,40D
TOO
«6
80,000
«Uli
R.E.
XIM
10,000
i«,a»
HBO
10,»8
•Dill
R.E.
-
-
1I,J10
S,4I0
ii,i»
IM
II QouMiif fanil, nangicoi ud ci
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
153
of Corporations — Continued.
$4,573
77,968
21,305
11,286
128,070
100,(
10,001
0,810
138
8,744
15,022
8.152
24,101
17,807
Absktb— Oon.
IP
•
a
1
8
§
1
1.
a
B.
a
n
-\
a$800
6182.500
c 5,408
1,825
46,267
400
$126
15,000
14,207
/ 70,000
70
3,404
^02
A 1,288
00,602
5,057
23,403
5
$27,040
15,000
42,156
181,516
96,729
349,338
93,118
829,266
892,078
LlABILITHS.
24,089
8,750
9,872
102,150
50,255
51,486
13,953
47,942
56,803
26,475
40,160
124,389
s
OQ
0<
5
Q
t
&
Profit
hi 5
o o
o
*«T3
Balance
and L
Reserve
precia
$27,040
15,000
26,000
100,000
50,000
800,000
60,000
150,000
800,000
50,000
10,000
9,600
9,872
100,000
30,000
40,000
6,000
15,000
20,000
15,000
25,000
24,000
$17,156
71,626
44,943
8,500
40,517
156,303
41,995
8,617
15,515
11,486
2,498
29,036
26,110
2,806
12,222
54,900
(2 $7,688
$4,932
1,786
40,833
2,696
6,380
50,078
5,422
2,150
4,740
5,465
3,906
6,440
8,669
2,938
25,499
$4,959
« 10,000
20,000
J3
o
H
$27,040
15,000
42,156
181,516
96,729
849,833
98,118
329,266
892,073
60,000
24,089
9,600
9,872
102,160
50,265
51,486
18,953
47,942
5,253 56,803
26,475
40,160
124,389
a Bight share* own atock. b Books, schedules, plans, etc. c Fumitare and flxtnrea.
d Onaranty aecount. e Borplns account. / Suspense account for sales of land and depreciation.
g Offlee fixtarea. h Oil, scrap, chips, etc.
154
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAMB OF OORPO-
RATION.
«D
^
s
•
3
a
1
%i
O
1'
1
la
o
Mechanlot* MilU, .
Medford Maoufftcturing
Company, The, .
Bieroantlle Law Com
paoy, The, .
Merchant Box and Coop
erage Company (for
X898), • • •
Merchant Box and Coop
erage Company, .
Merchants* Mannfactnr
ing Company,
Merchants* Steam Light-
er Company,
Merchants' Steam Lighter
Company (2d return).
Merchants' Woollen
Company (for 1898), .
Merohanta' Woollen
Company, . . •
Merrick Lumber Com-
pany, ....
Merrick Thread Com-
pany, . . • •
Merrimac Chemical
Company, .
Merrimack Clothing
Company, The, .
Merrimac Hat Company,
Merrimack Manufactor*
ing Company,
Merrimac Paper Com-
pany, ....
Merrimac River Towing
Company, .
Merrimac Valley Steam-
boat Company, .
Merrimac Wheel and
Qear Company, .
Morry Mount Oranite
Company, .
Methuen Company,
Metropolitan Steamship
Company, The, .
1894.
Nov. 6,
Feb. 6
Nov. 18,
May 19
Deo. 17
Oct. 81
Apr. 4|
Dec. 0
Jan. 2
July 27
May 17
Mar. 1
Feb. 20
Nov. 8
June 27
July 27
Sept. 20,
Jan. 81
Anfir.24
Oct. 5
Apr. 4,
Apr. 16
July 11
1804.
Nov. 'l. $750,000
a Jan. 11
Oct. 2,
1893.
Nov. 10
1804.
Nov. 9
Oct. 24
1893.
Nov. 6,
1894.
Nov. 6
1898.
6 July 19
1894.
6 July 26
Apr. 18
Jan. 24
Jan. 31
Aug. 7
June 20
June 27
June 28
Jan. 15
1898.
Nov. 14
1894.
July 16
Jan. 17
b Apr. 6,
June 5
60,000
2,000
66,000
66,000
800,000
18,000
18,000
700,000
700,000
76,000
760,000
226,000
26,000
100,000
2,600,000
100,000
60,000
80,000
40,260
16,000
400,000
600,000
ASSBTS.
i
m
^
a 9
6S
a
p
n
a
o
$209,064
30.200
22,488
401,646
824,286
42,468
450,000
141,938
40,000
1,300,000
339,321
366,060
$41,000
with
80,646
$168,064
B.B.
22,483
821,000
34,968
with
with
with
400,000
with
10,000
<l 6,000
with
821,784
7,600
R.E.
real
K. A.
900,000
real
800
1,116
real
$616,999
8,840
23,060
28,622
904,006
287,066
288,146
7,500
660,000
estate
20,000
700,000
estate
c 8,000
7,970
1,131
estate
« 372,000
$41,091
12,923
3,833
13,899
22,815
48,748
10,168
6,768
76,Sfl8
284.216
63,800
1,677
104,370
729,623
64,151
1,800
8,666
16,661
271.840
200,439
a Should have been held.
d Quarry.
b Adjourned.
e Steamers and lighters.
c On tug boats.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
155
of Corporations — Continued.
A88KT8 — Con.
LZABILITIBS.
-•So
•
t
••
1
•
m
1
a
Si
1
s
Balance Profit
and Lois.
Total.
1
Capital Stock.
•
1
•
Balance Profit
«nd Losi.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
$101»838
-
-
-
1
$867,982
$760,000
$96,180
-
$21,802
-
$867,982
7,183
•
1
-
-
68,626
60,000
7,600
-
1,026
-
68.026
-
■
a $2,404
-
6,297
2,000
3,041
-
866
-
6.297
84,741
-
-
'
94,192
65,000
26,046
-
2,246
$900
94.192
40.912
-
-
-
114,732
65,000
46,808
-
4.424
-
114.732
114,382
-
11,000
-
1,474.767
800.000
469.049
-
206.718
-
1,474.767
-
-
613,000
-
13,000
18,000
-
-
-
-
13,000
-
-
6 6,600
$6,600
13,000
13.000
-
-
-
-
13.000
344,000
-
14,761
117,248
1,004,966
700,000
394,966
-
-
-
1.094.966
130,004
-
16.193
241,298
1,006,638
700,000
306.638
-
-
-
1.006.638
71.18S
-
2,000
-
199,514
76,000
77,470
-
14.044
38,000
199.614
1,102,137
-
73.867
-
2,620,210
760.000
1.041,386
-
628.874
200,000
2,620.210
101,018
-
14,875
-
321,126
213,832
68.634
«•
-
38,660
321.126
88,«58
-
S 180
c2,908
1 .
38,282
25,000
10,487
-
2.795
-
38.282
47,379
-
-
211,765
100,000
106.796
-
4.960
-
211.766
1,437,MS
-
-
4.167,166
2,500,000
1,304.864
-
75.097
277.206
4.167.166
M,128
-
-
-
447,600
100,000
223,061
-
-
124.649
447.600
-
-
4 27,000
16,000
60,000
50.000
-
-
-
-
60.000
-
(
€6,000
/22,000
14,466
44,066
80.000
14.065
-
-
-
44,066
16,621
440
19,038
62.524
40.250
22.274
-
-
-
62,624
8,300
g 667
^
33,960
15,000
14.063
-
-
4.897
33.960
208.026
-
-
844,935
400,000
346,000
-
99,936
-
844.935
-
-
-
572,489
1
500,000
32,876
•«
39,563
-
672.439
a OlBee famitare, fixtures and library. b Three lighters. c Farniture and fixtures.
d TwelTe bargee and tog boats, e Steamer City of Haverhill. / Steaoaer Herrimao. g Ofllce fumitore, etc.
156
ANNUAL RETURNS Ot^ CORt^OftATlONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificatbs of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
•
«
^
5
■
s
«
1
©•d
'g
a «
1
1
M P.
3a
Metropolitan Stock Ex-
change, The,
M i d d 1 e b y Oven Com-
pany, * . . .
Middlesex Company, .
Mlddleeex Leather Com-
pany, ....
Middlesex Newspaper
Company, .
Middlesex RealEsUte As-
sodation of Cambridge,
Milan Mining Company,
MUford Electric Light
and Power Company,
Mill ord Oas Light Com-
pany, ....
Mil ford Mnsic Hall
Company, .
Milford Pink Granite
Company, .
Milford Shoe Company,
MUford Water Company,
Millay Last Company, .
MiUbnry Electric Com-
pany
MUlbnry Electric Com-
pany (2d return).
Miller Brothers ft Co.
Corporation,
Miller's Falls Company,
Miller's River Building
Company, .
Miller's River Manufact-
uring Company, .
Millis Water Company, .
Milton Bradley Com-
pany, ....
Milton Building Associ-
ates, . • • «
Milton Light and Power
Company, .
1894.
June 21,
1894.
May 7.
Aug. 28,
June 6,
Jan. 9,
1898.
Dec. 27,
Aug. 8,
1894.
July 2,
May 28,
Feb. 6,
Sept. 27,
May 14,
Mar. 17,
1893.
Oct. 18,
Nov. 9,
1894.
Aug. 29,
July 16,
July 9,
May 29,
May 7,
Aug. 6,
June 7,
May 18,
May 7.
Mar. 21,
Feb. 12,
Feb. 21,
Feb. 2,
Mar. 6,
1898.
b Oct. 80,
Nov. 20,
1894.
Oct. 16,
June 13,
May 4,
Mar. IS,
Jan. 26,
Mar. 17,
1898.
Dec. 7,
Feb. 3,
1894.
Jan. 17,
Sept. 21,
Sept. 17,
Mar. 16,
6 Mar. 12,
Apr. 9,
Mar. 6.
Nov. 20,
June 10,
$100,000
60,000
760,000
40,000
6,000
6,000
40,000
40,000
72,800
81,600
6,200
200,000
160,000
14,000
16,000
17,000
40,000
200,000
6,000
80,000
26,000
66,000
42,000
30,000
A88XT8.
I
I
L
l|
•
c
«
a
'd h
2
^
gs
PQ
s
$100,000
7,600
40.600
48,086
24,600
62,700
16,286
7,282
4,606
4,690
90,060
8,600
20,000
16,500
S
o e>
63,138
-
-
with
R.B.
-
$90,916
$1,000
6,600
80.600
10,000
-
6,068
8,460
-
8,986
86,000
20,000
4,600
7,700
66,000
with
R.B.
with
R.E.
with
R.B.
6,000
3,600
10,200
e 6,800
-
600
-
10,811
$100,000
4,064
2,800
8,000
( 14,478
{ a 14.229
64,867
9,800
49,819
10,000
8,266
11,487
11,440
82,686
600
28,983
(224,600
23,420
< 83,813
22,804
I
$212,682
7,286
11,060
2,108
m
26,286
2,086
6,236
840
82,200
121,916
4,800
2,168
1.41T
2,164
26,807
120,847
8.087
1,067
34,610
1,045
1,166
a Electric plant.
b Adjourned.
c And tanka.
d And pipes.
e Lines, etc.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
157
of Corporations — Continued.
A88KTS —
CSon.
13-2
m
s
t
••
•
•
1
ce Profit
Ss£S
a
1
11
a
&4
f^
n
3
•
JM
8
**
00
Ital
•
3
o.
.o
3
^
Liabilities.
$1,000 $25,000
&48,8eo
129,586
186
5,500
35,130
3,922
3,000
131,839
1,041
688
40,180
»2.866
12,226
64,284
561
-1
$6,081
1,051
36
-!
265
631,052
c 2,500
1,300
(21,023
e 15,782
/»6,547
16,903
18;»5
1,000
9,500
1,117
$17,666
1,302
5,225
17.118
802
8
t
$212,682 !l$100,000
50,952
1,147,836
42,440
2,570
530 2,283
50,000
750,000
167,546 40,000
I
6,486 5,000
I
8,263 i 2,650
79,285
71,250
112,426
60,000
86,113
367,297
343,054
18,442
35,041
86,505
40,000
40,000
72,300
31,500
5,200
900,000
$109,081
952
96,834
121,546
1,486
5,584
83,285
29,835
3,615
18,500
80,913
144,897
150,000 I 176,560
14,000 I 4,442
15,000
17,000
68,086 1 1 40,000
357,009 I 200,000
9,0a3 I 6,000
19,642
18,707
12,536
41,829
1,600
64,226 30,000 ' 15,406
85,397 i' 25,000 jJ2.2ra
128,831 I 56,000 ' 21,225
$3,601
a $6,000
29
1,415
711
2,461
16,504
399
798
56,748
70,998
42,000
12,500
30,000 I 40,998
$300,502
35,800
19,989
$212,682
50,952
1,147.336
167.546
6,486
8,266
73,285
71.250
112,426
50,000
86,113
367,297
343,054
18,442
85,041
36,505
5,489
10,061
68,086
115,270
•V
357,099
-
-
7,600
6,820
12,000
64,226
-
-
85.307
28,606
18,000
123,881
-
2,248
56,748
-
-
70,998
a Cootingent fond.
e BlnkiDg fund.
b Street maiDS. c Meters.
/ Water supply ; reservoirs, pipes, etc.
d Ftztnres.
g Disputed claims.
158
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
AbstnuA of CsKnpiCATES or Comditioh
When Certificate was
Filed.
•
1
1
CapiUl Stock aa fixed
by the Corporation.
1
ASSSTS.
NAME OP CORPO-
RATION.
j
1 &
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
a
1
k
5^^
Milton Water Company,
1894.
Apr. 12,
1894.
Feb. 21,
$86,000
«
.
a $6,600
6 $8,798
$1,766
MitUneague Paper Com-
pany, ....
June 4,
Feb. 17,
100,000
$156,268
with
real
eaute
80,237
Monroe Meat Company,
May 5,
Apr. 20.
40,000
-
-
-
-
07,584
M on son Co-operative
Creamery Asaociation ,
Mar. 19,
1893.
Dec. 80,
8,700
2,400
$600
1,800
1,800
•
Monson Woolen Com-
pany
Nov. 16,
1894.
c May 9,
20,000
cf 8.000
with
real
eaUie
350
M on tague City Rod Com •
pany, ....
Sept. 15,
Aug. 20,
00,000
26,300
4,000
32.300
24.113
88.642
Montague Co-operative
Creamery ABSociatlon,
The, ....
June 9,
Apr. 2,
2,600
2,768
800
2,463
050
«.0S2
Montague Paper Com-
pany, ....
May ae.
May 23,
400,000
298,000
with
R.B.
207,000
83,863
Monte Pio Co-operative
Association,
Apr. 20,
Jan. 2,
7,000
-
-
-
-
S.00O
Monument Mills, .
Apr. 20,
Apr. 18,
50,000
126,000
-
-
164,000
148,602
Moore & Wyman Eleva-
tor & Machine Works,
Jan. 20,
1898.
Oct. 14.
26,000
-
S3.000
10.401
17.676
Morgan Construction
Company, .
Nov. 1,
1894.
July 2,
20,000
-
-
6,014
18,777
Morgan Envelope Com-
pany, ....
Jan. 28,
Jan. 22,
100,000
23.074
with
R.B.
60.000
200.336
Morgan Spring Com-
pany, ....
Nov. 14,
July 24,
80,000
-
8,670
.
10.178
20,888
Morning Mall Corpora-
tion, The, .
Aug. 23,
July 16,
40,000
-
-
-
34.319
16,721
M 0 r r e 1 1 Liquor Cure
Company, .
May 1,
1893.
Deo. 1,
12.000
-
-
.
-
-
Morrill Leather Com-
pany
Nov. 1,
1894.
Oct. 81,
26,000
-
-
-
« 1.766
88,821
Morse Twist Drill and
Machine Company, .
June 19,
June 4,
600,000
1
114,000
with
R.B.
334.676
180,492
Moulton Leather Com-
pany
Feb. 27.
Feb. 8,
60,000
-
mm
-
4.600
88,373
Mount Hope Iron Com-
pany, ....
Oct. 3,
Oct. 2,
200,000
1
48.907
with
real
eatate
67.470
Mount Tom Sulphite
Pulp Company, The, .
Juno 7,
/June 4,
300,000
415,597
with
real
esUte
81.512
Mrs. C. H. Ring Com-
pany
Apr. 28,
Jan. 8,
12,000
-
-
-
2.603
7,662
Muddy Pond Company,
May 14,
9
26,600
16,000
-
-
-
-
a Meter house. b Meters and connections. c Mill burned; date fixed, but no meeting held.
d Equity io. e And fixtures. / Adjourned. g No meeting was held; statement of May 1. 1994.
1894.1
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
159
of Corporations — Continued.
^ •OLi
$1,140
29,486
200
58,950
508
44,060
6,822
152,000
15,492
10,462
102,457
5,421
783
17,158
209,827
40,803
86,470
58^73
5,327
ASSSTS — COD.
I
£
9
O
»
s
I
9
2 .
o
n
o
H
Liabilities.
-}
a $966
6184,313
067
5,425
2,050
$5,000 c 60,000
15,805
490
j $0,110
2,426
4,822
$158,588
218,407
103,573
3,700
8,850
183,429
13,103
31,356
16,756
632,423
9,812
579,502
66,468
37.312
440,867
60,527
50,823
OQ
3
57,740
839,485
96,948
234,212
506,082
15,482
31,756
$75,600
100,000
40,000
3,700
20,000
60,000
10,283 2,500
400,000
6,415
50,000
25,000
20,000
100,000
80,000
40,000
12,000
25,000
600,000
50,000
200,000
300,000
12,000
25,600
$82,988
118,407
63,573
8,300
19,000
7,602
3,000
1,594
7
37,723
5,000
164,617
23,663
10,600
100
26,230
31,475
46,948
84,212
184,526
3,437
6,156
g
«d
2 .
o
o
CQ
0 .
h. a
o o
%^-s
o ct
preci
2
o
$24,429 $80,000
91
229,423
481
829,495
2,705
6,215
156,100
183
6,510
85,405
45
822
200,000
1,040
6.097
20,150
$158,588
218.407
103.573
3,700
28,300
133,429
10,283
632,423
9,312
579,502
66,468
37,312
440,867
6,864 60,527
50,823
12,100
122,605
21,556
67,740
839,485
96,948
234,212
506,0S2
15,4SJ
31,75(3
a TooU.
b BMemenU and piping.
c Property in Connecticut.
160
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
AassTs.
Mudgo Shoe Company, .
Munroe Felt and Paper
Company, .
Murdoek Parlor Orate
Company, .
Murray Brotbera Com-
pany, . . . .
Mutual District Meaaen-
ger Company of Bos-
ton, . . . .
N. D. Dodge & Bliaa
Co., • . . .
N. Ward Company,
Nahant Land Company
(forl»8), . . .
Nahant Land Company,
Nahant Steamboat Ex-
press Company, .
Nantasket Beaoh Steam-
boat Company, .
Nantucket Oas Light
Company, .
Narraganaett Mills,
Nashawannuck Manu-
facturing Company, .
Natlck Citizen Printing
Company, The, .
Natlck Gas Light Com-
pany, . . . .
Natlck Protective Union,
National Bell Telephone
Company, The, .
National Construction
Company, .
National Dock and Ware-
house Company, .
National Home Building
Company, .
National Manufacturing
Company, The, .
18M.
Feb. 14,
Sept.
4,
Mar.
21,
Jane 28,
July
2«.
Dec.
27,
May
28,
Apr.
13,
Nov.
5,
Oct.
18,
Jan.
24,
July
26,
Nov.
24,
June 20,
June 27,
Feb.
12.
Feb.
23,
Mar.
w.
Mar.
1,
May
22,
May
10,
Feb.
16,
1894.
Feb. 1,
July 11,
Feb. 28,
Mar. 22,
June 16,
Deo. 18,
May 26,
1803.
Oct. 26,
1804.
Oct. 26,
Oct. 8,
Jan. 10,
July 11,
Oct. 24,
June 10,
Apr. 17,
1808
Aug. 0,
1804.
Jan. 24,
Mar. 12,
jdlJan. 17,
Feb. 24,
Mar. 21,
Jan. 17,
86,887 with
50,000
&
a
5 I
a I
p
n !
a
o
of
$125,000 ,, $21,000 ' $5,000
li
60,000 84,170
35,000
30,000
250,000
26,000
100,000
250,000 150,000 with
250,000 150,000 with
60,000
250,000 647,600 with
36,000 2,500 600
400,000 816,618 16,118
400,000
5,000
I
20,000 I 16,670 with
I
I
6,000
850,000
50,000
800,000 277,000
112,636 1 1 210,405 with
$16,000 ! $32,445
8,000
2,300
112,060
R. B*
R. j£.
R.S.
2,000
200,500
R.B.
R.E.
25,681
4,000
5,688
7,000
c 207,500
4,000
262,000
118,238
7,160
24,806
6 24,314
R.B.
« I
I
17,200 <
S
$99,452
41,040
45,792
12,271
5,88,")
7,254
43,239
a 38,728
33,716
24
6,442
127
33,815
67.645
6
1,833
1,939
61.462
27,62H
2.455
36,5C»<i
a Mortgages.
<f Adjourned.
b Including wharves.
« And tools.
c Including ateamboata.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
161
of CorpoToJtioiM — Continued.
A88ST8— Con.
« s &
C « 6
2*5 a
5
s
I
of
•
«3
i
2 .
1
•2
m*
o
1
%
n
$80,000
20,M6
64,006
10,853
- 6200,000
a $2,201
586
7.874
64,610
840
61,207
214,530
2/W
dbfi4A
2,000
37,350
12,383
c41,647
220
0 1,800
^2,225
o
$7,170
48,876
30,683
10,209
48,405
5,852 I 192,432
S A 69 )
* } i 6,523 I
8,029
170,301
112,398
37,757
247,582
27,881
227,827
188,728
183,716
48,900
261,542
38,150
566,640
491.509
7,175
45,186
0,288
49,888
138,406
502,912
269,428
99,135
Liabilities.
•
5
OQ
1
Debts.
•
I
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
1126.000
$59,137
-
$51
-
$184,188
60,000
22,609
-
$06,602
179,301
35,000
44,308
-
-
33,000
112.398
30.000
2,172
-
-
5,685
87,757
225,000
666
-
21,866
-
247,532
26,000
2,881
-
-
-
27,881
100,000
30,832
-
8,000
70,095
227,827
78,402
29,300
-
81,026
-
188,728
66,902
26,000
-
101,814
-
188,n6
48,900
-
-
-
-
48,900.
250,000
-
-
11,542
-
261,542
36,000
2,150
-
-
-
38,150
400,000
92,937
-
73,708
-
566,640
400,000
91,609
-
-
-
401,609
6,000
440
-
-
1,785
7,175
20,000
12,258
12,878
-
46,136
6,000
/360
$1,800
1,128
-
9,288
50,000
88,406
-
-
138,406
500,000
2,912
-
-
502,912
112,635
156,793
1
-
269,428
50,000
33,524
•
-
5,611
10,000
99.135
a Store fixtures. b And contracts.
d Groceries, provisions and fiztnres.
/ Interest on stock. g Horses, teams, etc.
c Construction acoonnt and fixtures.
e Sinking fund.
h Furniture. i Organization.
162
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates op Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Natiooal Mortgage and
Debenture Company, .
National Needle Com-
pany, . • . .
National Papeterie Com-
pany, . . . .
National Plaster Com-
pany. The, .
National Shoe and Leath-
er Exchange, The,
Nanmkeag Steam Cotton
Company, .
Nemaaket Mills,
Neograph Publishing
Company, .
N e ▼ e r B 1 1 p Horseshoe
Company, The, .
New Bedford Copper
Company, .
Now Bedford Cordage
Company, •
New Bedford Oas and
Edison Light Com-
pany, . . . .
New Bedford loe Com-
pany, The, .
New Bedford Manufact-
uring Company, .
New Bedford, Martha's
Vineyard and Nan-
tucket Steamboat Com-
pany
New Bedford Opera
House Company,
New Bedford Real Es-
tate Association, .
New Bed ford Steam
Coasting Corporation,
New Bod ford Street
Transportation Com-
pany, . • . .
Now England and 8a-
V a n n a h Stoaroship
Company, The, .
New Enghind Awl and
Needle Company,
1804.
June 14,
Nov. 2,
June 2,
Sept. 16,
May 7.
Ha
'2*
I-
O
A88ST8.
'! s
9
a
1
^ .
tm
2 o
■
•
•£
a
a
■O ft.
•o
2
0 •
•S
o
ct «S
a
as
Hi
OQ
^
C3
.a o
o
1804.
Feb. 14,
Oct. 10,
$258,000
100,000
$67,062
20,708
Jan. 27, 100,000
May 2,
Jan. 17,
10,000
30,000
Feb. 15, Jan. 17, | 1,600,000
I
May 11, Apr. 0, 400,000
1808.
Nov. 15, Deo. 20, 50,000
1804. I
July 6, ! Jane 20, , 50,000
1,500,000
673,607
Feb. 28,
Apr. 14,
Sept. 20,
Feb. 20,
Jan. 0,
Mar. 31,
July 14,
Apr. 3,
Feb. 5,
250,000
28.000
60,000
with
with
with
R. E.
$67,620
Mar. 5, 200,000
Aug. 6,
550,000 ' 706,558
Feb. 12, 20,000
Jan. 3,
600,000
Feb. 28, 141,700
June 6, I 60,000
Mar. 20, 60,000
Mar. 10, Feb. 5,
Aug. 8,
Aug. 1,
Oct. 2.^, Aug. 8,
Mar. 3,
<?Jan. 6,
100,000
25,000
10,800
140,000
0,161
40,000
602,367
4,662
500,000 '
10,000
6,000
with
$20,000
with
15,000
500
351,987
with
R.B.
R.E.
real
120,000
R.E.
26,000
4,162
R.E.
-!
$28,241
24,870
600
2,600
8,420
65,000
$716,643 i
a 30,167 \
54,498
63,5(^
6,631
5.600
622,831
10,109
031
15,767
48.601
71,VW
87.467
10.036
43,960
3,246
847
754
11,502
10,22S
(f 000,000 5R..V22
estate
860,000
16,020
c 123,031
5,500
4.00O
a Kansas Land and Loan Co. stock.
d Steamships.
b And mortgages.
e Adjourned.
c Two tugs and foor barges.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
163
oj Corporations — Continued.
AB8BT8 —
Con.
LlABILITISS.
■O A 1
• si
•
■a
*>
&
%
1
8
:i4
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
Total.
•
GO
1
5
•
t
Reaenrea.
Balance Profit
and Lose.
Reaerve for De-
preciation.
•
-
.
$
a 18,583
6 8,883
$34,768
$866,006
$258,900|
$84,367)
c488,988}
d484)
$3,800
-
$30,067
$866,096
$52^79
-
-
-
164,916
100,000
56,309
-
$8,607
-
164,916
S3,819
-
-
-
229,917
100,000
129,917
-
-
-
229.917
900
$5,000
e 800
11,870
24,861
10,000
14,861
-
-
-
24,861
-
-
/30,000
35,600
80,000
4,400
-
1.200
-
36,600
450,881
-
-
-
2,482,712
1,500,000
660,652
-
823,060
-
2,482,712
87,902
-
-
-
680,828
400.000
257,500
-
28,828
-
680,828
2,500
-
150
46,626
52,707
50,000
2,707
-
-
-
62.707
02,022
-
6,841
27.760
147,819
50,000
07,319
-
-
-
147,319
148,908
-
-
-
322,664
250,000
86,285
-
86,279
-
822,564
127,3&4
-
5,258
204,500
200,000
4,500
-
-
-
204,500
40,982
15,000
1,610
-
891,607
1
650,000
245,301
-
63,666
32,640
891,607
-
-
1,200
8,252
1
30,688
20,000
10,688
-
-
-
30,688
496,241
-
-
-
1,040,210
1
500,000
497.631
-
12,579
30,000
1,040,210
-
-
pl79,108
-
191,504
141,700
42,971
-
6,833
-
191.504
-
-
-
-
56,767
50,000
6,000
-
-
767
56,767
-
• -
-
-
08.121
50,000
43,121
-
-
-
93,121
-
-
-
3,254
1
137,877
100,000
37,877
-
-
-
137,877
25,565
-
-
-
40,455
25,000
12,594
-
2,861
-
40,455
^
-
36.859
1,340,868
500,000
846,868
-
-
-
1,346,868
8,582
-
-
-
24,071
10,000
4,433
9,638
-
-
24,071
a Lefal ezpenaea and expense account.
e Debenture bonds. d Interest on bonds.
/ Reports, contracts, books, frnncbisen and furniture.
b Office furniture and supplies.
e Tools, fixtures, etc.
g Hteamers.
164
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abatrcu^ of Certificates op Condition
■
a
>
S
•
as
C
V
NAME OF CORPO-
«
1
RATION.
9
^•8
o
|S
9
^
Q
M O
o o
New England Despatch
Company, .
New England Blectrio
Company, .
New England Felt Roof-
ing Works, .
New England Fibre Com-
pany,The, .
New England Paint
Company, .
New England Patent Fi re
Escape Company,
New England Pabllsh-
ing Company, The, .
New England Rattan
Company, .
New England Telegraph
Company, .
New England Telephone
and Telegraph Com-
pany of Massachasetts,
The, . . . .
New England Telephone
Company, The, .
New Home Sewing Ma-
chine Company, .
New Process Twist Drill
Company, .
New York and Boston
Despatch Express
Company, .
Newbury port Car Man-
ufacturing Company, .
Newburvport Gas and
Electric Company,
Newbniyport Herald
Company, The, .
Newbaryport Water
Company, .
Newell Brothers Manu-
facturing Company,
The, . . . .
Newport Transfer Ex-
press Company, .
Newton and Watcrtown
Gas Light Company, .
1894.
July 8],
Oct.
26,
Feb.
14.
Jane
7.
May
29,
Jan.
29,
Feb.
19.
Mar.
8.
Aug.
23,
May
3.
Feb.
16.
Oct.
6.
May
8.
June
7,
Mar.
14,
Jan.
23.
Mar.
29,
June 20,
Feb.
6,
May
21.
Mar.
14.
1894.
June 19,
1893.
Apr. 3,
1894.
Jan. 24,
May 23,
$25,000
4,000
80,000
110,400
May 28, 80,000
Jan. 28,
Jan. 17,
Jan. 17,
Aug. 14.
Apr. 4,
Jan. 20,
aSept.ll,
Jan. 29,
May 7,
Feb. 19,
Jan. 17,
a Mar. 12,
Jan. 9,
Jan. 13,
May 7.
Feb. 14,
6,000
25,000
12,000
30,000
25,000
900,000
600,000
15,600
100,000
60,000
140,000
30,000
300,000
100,000
10,000
250,000
A88BT8.
S
A
-a
&
fl
of
^u
_ •
ll
1
Land
ter
S
o
114,272
98,970
145,981
110,453
$7,653 I $4,721
with
9,330 with
43,492 , with
$2,832
real
184,920
18,000 80,970
650
R.E.
with real
5,000
R.E.
with < R.E.
a
•Si
$1,115
estate
6,567
1,746
125,607
9.000
13,000
estate
3,500
49,915
$125
82,1S2
7.375
29,058
318
92,833
7,763
9;2M
748,092
7,788
80,058
16,442
7,&02
4,496
1.496
40,039
1.132
4n,253 53,678
(I Adjourned.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
of CorporatwM — Contmued.
165
AssKTs — Con.
-•So
^^ s •
4^(12 o
5
a
0
o
a>
•
3
$29,720
11,805
22,101
11,040
348,780
16,068
3«,«0
3,801
4,000
812
01,216
14,487
a $8,025
$13,340
0,000
76
$21,788 $80,713
126
5,276
e 15,000
d 33,000
8,461
6 V8,993
2,720
^11,908
A 379,602
e 11,233
4,304
22,005
LlABII.ITn8.
16,088
120,646»
168,797
57,726
6,348
28,100
20,540
16,000
224,173
M
o
o
3
I
1.
0^3
•
o
9
«!-)
t
o
flT)
s
•^S
&
a"
ft .
I*
$25,000
175
1,324,800
82,446
129,701
78,161
169,367
83,034
381,972
224,661
12,540
660,176
80,000
119,400
30,000
6,000
25,000
12,000
30,000
25,000
$5,713
17,432
49,397
27,267
500,000
8,109
6,271
188,496
44,965
15,600 2,094
100,000
50,000
140,000
80,000
300,000
100,000
10,000
250,000
24,231
15,802
8,634
48,887
70,190
2,540
146,340
$23,213
450
348
/ $2,600
2,278
10,677
779,925
14,752
29,701
13,565
33,085
54,471
$1,420
211,100
3
o
$30,713
52,786
120,646
168,797
57,726
6,348
28,109
20,549
80,000
224,173
1,824,890
32,446
120,701
78,161
169,367
33,634
381,972
224,661
12,540
660,175
a Hones, wftgons aod eqalpmenta. b Paid back to atockholderfl. c Telegraph lines and fixtures.
(/ Telephone line. e Personal property. / Dividends.
g Street mains and arc lamps. A Construction account.
166
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates op Condition
NAME OP CORPO-
RATION.
at
9
cS
Newton Chemical Com
pany, The, .
Newton Machine Com
pany, .
Newton Paper Com
pany, ...
Newton Real Estate As
•oelatlon of Newton,
Nickerson & Mayo Com
pany, .
Nine Mile Pond Fishing
Company, . .
Nine Mile Pond Fishing
Company (2d return),
Nockege Mills,
Nonantam Worsted
Company, .
Nonotuck Paper Com-
pany, The, .
Nonotuck Silk Company,
Norfolk Woolen Com-
pany, . . . .
Norman Paper Com-
pany, ....
North Adams Gas Light
Company, .
North Adams Manufact-
uring Company, .
North Atlantic Steam-
ship Company, The, .
North Attlcborough G-as
Light Company, .
North Brookfield Co-op-
erative Creamery As-
sociation,
North Brookfield Shoe
Company, .
North Dighton Co-oper-
ative Stove Company,
North Baston Boot and
Shoe Manufacturing
Company, .
North Shore Electric
Company, The, .
1894.
June 15,
July 26,
June 14,
Apr. 10,
June 16,
Jan. 1,
Dec. 27,
June 16,
July 26,
Feb. 3,
Feb. 16,
May 8,
May 26,
a
i
«
o
Q
o
1894.
June 13,
June 13,
May 12,
Apr. 2,
a May 31,
1893.
Dec. 4,
1894.
Deo. 3,
May 21,
a June 20,
Jan. 30,
Jan. 30,
a Apr.21,
■
May 12,
Aug. 21, Jnly 80,
Nov. 8, Sept. 19,
May 7, Apr. 4,
Jan. 5,
Aug. 9,
1893.
Dec. 18,
1894.
Mar. 26,
Apr. 11, Apr. 9,
Feb. 27,
Jan. 7,
Oct. 30, Oct. 1,
Oct. 18,
6 July 9,
$80,000
6,000
72,000
60,000
14,000
1,000
1,000
300,000
500,000
155.000
1,000,000
80,000
300,000
50,000
150,000
800,000
68,100
2,000
20,000
11,500
14,800
125,000
A8BBT8.
"3
&
«
01
s
•
•
Deb
ble.
fl o
&
•g*
«£
a
fl
*!
Land
ter
2
P
A
s
^
^66,000
134,786
700
700
101,507
325,000
804,072
16,000
$10,000
22,000
97,500
88,100
14,000
6,771
12,000
16,098
90,000
with
550
560
with
with
with
with
76,000
6,000
with
$86,000
R.E.
160
160
R. S.
$10,000
85,000
7.600
2,000
with
2,400
with
200,000
440,141
real
estate
R.B.
155,711
R.E.
10,000
400,226
( with ^
j b'ld*gs^
16,000
61,000
R.B.
89,766
30,500
20,000
1,800
1.342
12,000
6,000
R.B.
1,312
0,600
3,000
R.E.
148,787
$2,501
2,061
23,772
2,132
8.487
404
471
8,503
410,108
168,498
568,770
86,518
44,576
6,500
1M,452
120,753
0.746
775
1,391
14,573
58
0,842
a Adjourned.
b Should have been held.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
167
of Corporations — Continued.
Assets ~ Con.
Liabilities.
■a A
III
atScQ S
i
s
•
•
S
a
CS
1
Balance Profit
and LoM.
•
1
o
■
1
•
■
s
%
Balance Profit
and LoBB.
Reaerve for De-
preciation.
•
2
o
i
-
-
$12,601
a
-
$12,501
-
$12,501
$18,833
-
-
-
30,893
$5,000
$25,893
-
-
-
80,893
23,706
-
-
-
138,480
72,000
21,031
-
30,449
$15,000
138,480
-
-
-
-
136,918
60,000
71,000
-
5,918
-
136,918
9,846
-
2> $2,600
-
15,833
14,000
524
-
1,309
-
15,833
00
-
-
$836
1,500
1,000
500
-
-
-
1,500
57
-
-
272
1,500
1,000
500
-
-
-
1,600
-
-
' -
105,010
105.010
-
-
-
-
105,010
404,788
-
-
-
1,524,082
500,000
511,408
-
512,624
-
1,524,032
122,184
-
1,000
-
616,682
155,000
275,888
$185,794
with
reserves
616,682
876,908
-
-
-
1,900,461
1,000,000
726,666
-
173,795
-
1,900,461
9,705
-
3,500
-
74,718
30,000
5,004
-
89,714
with bal.
P. & L.
j 74,718
171.522
-
-
-
091,324
300,000 J
c 100,000
(2288,752
(
2,572
-
691,324
16,500
-
-
-
106,000
50,000
45,000
-
-
-
95,000
192,544
-
-
-
636,262 J
150,000
e 50,000
144.344
-
156,918
35,000
536,262
-
-
71,297
108,531
300,581
300,000
581
-
-
-
300,581
2,760
-
200
31,200
102,015
68,100
/ 33,915
-
-
-
102,015
233
-
501
-
4,741
2,000
2,072
-
669
-
4,741
-
-
«
2,909
24,300
20,000
4,300
-
-
-
24,300
12,164
-
^4,603
104
39,527
11,500
20,861
-
-
7,166
39,r.2:
1
-
-
292
15,350
14,800
550
-
-
-
in.n.'io
1,388 i
»
A $10,000
09,103
6,795
286,513
125.000
* 75,000 1
86,513
-
286,513
a Capital paid back, the affairs of the company are being closed up.
c SaviDgB bank loan. d Including stockholders loans.
/ Scrip. g Patterns and flasks. h Franchise.
h Fixtures.
t Special stock.
i Bonds.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
North Tniro Ooid BIot-
■gsCo
Northunplon CnUvry
Oooipwiy, .
IfartbimptOD Bleotrlc
Ltgbtlna Oampu;, .
N«rU»aiplOD Emery
WhealCaDipaDy.Tlie,
ITonharapuin Ou Light
NortbOald Oa«p«nilve
Norton IroD Compmn; , ,
Norwood Bnglnesriog
Norwood Ou LIgbt
Cam piny, .
Horelty Paper Boi Com.
paoy, ....
0. D. Plllibaiy Com-
ply
O. T. Bogin Otulle
Compuy, .
0*k Hill Hotel Co.,
elly of Lowell, Proprt-
Odorleii KiuvUIng
lUy 18,
Aug. 34,
Ju. 2t,
Key S,
Aug. IS,
JnnoSS.
Jnly i.
Sept.JT,
Fab. 20,
Hot. S,
Apr. »,
Not. 21.
M.y !H,
Apr. 13,
July M,
Apr. IS,
Jnly U,
July SI,
Jnly S3,
May 12.
Feb. 21.
«T
•1^1
100,000
M,ooa
100,000
u,ooo
321,140
Tfi/KW
•20,000
•10,000
10.000
10,000
W.«S1
with
B.B.
1 40,N6
! 02:111
11,TU
1
«,1IB
•lU.
B.E.
8,000
8.200
wUh
B.B.
1,200
50,000
with
B.B.
27,000
wltb
R.E.
4,500
t.O»B
2,11!
2,075
6,000
18,4K
21,181
4,207
a.000
with
R.B.
500
.8,140
a,TTo
2,011
10,000
with
»,000
46,000
804,140
MUte
OWSl
ia,wB
TD.tU
-
9.800
2.M0
7,S00
00,000
-
B.B.
400
w,ioa
14,581
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
169
of Corporations — Contiuned.
A88BT8 — Con.
LlABILITRS.
Mi
Sali
•
s
1
•
j
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
«
1
•
1
OQ
3
«
O
•
1
•
. 1
Balance Profit
and Lose.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
a
o
H
-
-
-
-
$18,088
$15,000
$2,250
-
$888
-
$18,088
$Mt5M
-
-
-
117.959
100,000
855
-
2,104
$15,000
117,959
-
$1,185
a 31,554
-
103,521
58,700
18.806
2> 16.000
6,015
4,000
103,521
M,874
-
-
-
150,347
100,000
6,313
-
34,019
10,015
160,347
3,819
-)
c 20,000
d 5,875
-
79,106
60,000
5,000
18,688
5,418
79,106
-
-
-
-
4,400
3,670
730
-
-
-
4,400
-
-
-
-
50,000
65,000
10,000
-
-
-
75,000
50,330
-
« 20,866
-
135,956
20,000
5,900
-
110,056
-
135,956
17,430
-
-
-
55,140
15,000
80,682
-
458
•
55,140
10,808
-
-
$18,772
65,407
15,000
60,407
-
-
-
65,407
3,067
-
1,406
-
18,238
10,000
6,115
-
2,123
-
18,238
-
-
r/312i
-
13,641
12,000
-
-
1,611
-
13,641
1,184
-
-
-
6,935
5,000
880
-
1,046
-
6,985
587
$2,000
-
-
6,254
5,000
1,087
-
167
-
6,254
11.825
-
-
-
30,542
20,000
6,450
-
12,092
1,000
39,542
-
-
-
3,403
48,493
20,000
28,493
-
-
-
48,493
-
-
-
10,000
84,000
28,000
6,000
-
-
-
34,000
-
-
-
-
410,451
328,740
< 50,000
-
31.711
410,451
-
-
434
-
92.190
63,500
14.003
-
14,687
-
92,190
-
-
j400
-
10,491
8.000
2,200 i
f kl\
-
290
20,491
-
-
10.693
111,250
71.200
40,050
-
-
-
111,250
4,884
-
-
4,152
11,941
10.000
1,941
-
-
-
11,941
a ConatrDCtion. b Bonds. c Street mains. d Seven Union Pacific collateral tmst bonds.
« Including kilns. / Coal and lime, g Meters. h Street ligliting plant.
i Mortgage note. J Farnlture and fiztares. k Dividend unpaid.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abalract of CEimiricATBS of Conditiom
CompiDy, .
OnakaMtllaOrpai
Oniot Bajr Orova
inga Waler Work*,
Isntiil Coffee Horn
OaborD UUli, .
Otii CoirpiDy,
P. n. Curpantec
pnny.Tbe, .
P. r. Emory Ui
Joly I,
Uar. 3T,
UtJ Zl,
Apr. 24,
Feb. 13,
!
A.»T..
1
1
1
1
tm/m
♦110,000
-
•40,000
»2J,02S
07,000
with
R.B.
30,000
110,TB2
X3«
Ltw
-
-
-
3,310
400,000
S80,M8
wltb
R,B.
30.000
133,461
a»,ooo
1,600
1SS,SS3
100,000
63,150
(T,«6a
»4^688
20JW1
0^013
210,000
1O1.0OO
j,ooo
100,000
130.000
MIS
ifioo
1!,HM
with
R.H.
2,266
KfiK
.
-
46,860
42.000
1,160
5,000
.
-
1.6O0
3,333
15,000
1,300
6.760
ao,ooo
"-
"
2»
300.000
: -
160,000
-
m.ooo
31.60»
000,000
1 27S.004
aofloo
246.004
080,620
»4,0*3
800,000
6,000
360,000
with
B.B.
3S«,0M
173,141
3.M3
30.000
i -
-
11.000
l«,™i
2.600,000
626,000
wlU.
R.E.
STK.OOO
1.610,S«
30.000
8.000
30,000
.4.030
with
a.B.
(613,443
J .60.704
i :,™
s.'j.ooo
71
20,000
43.000
hSU
1. 000,000
-
-
n.m
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
171
of Corporations — Continued.
Assets— Con.
LlABILlTlBfl.
11=
atSOQ o
!8
, Patent RlghU.
1
1
1 ' Miscellaneous.
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
■
M
CQ
3
ft
o
•
•
Q
Reserves.
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
m
-a
o
'$7SJ45
-
$245,773
$150,000
$18,661
-
$77,112
-
$245,773
a 88,486
-
6 $18,677
(2,513,306
-
2,804.231
1,200,000
1,198,260
-
466,981
-
2,864,231
i.Teo
-
(12,376
e 1,000
$457
5.828
5,000
828
-
-
-
5,828
1,107
-
-
-
4,426
1.500
930
-
1,996
-
4,426
293,677
-
12,266
-
934.852
400,00b
433,998
-
100,854
-
934,852
34S,416
-
5,000
-
603.168
300,000
151,209
-
-
$51,869
603,168
44,727
-
-
-
196,954
100,000
53.448
-
7,000
36.506
196,954
147.774
-
-
$9,954
306,146
210.000
186.146
-
-
-
896,146
-
-
/ 1.700
-
16.456
5.000
1,028
$695
9,733
-
16,456
425
-
189
10,711
100.975
45,000
55,975
-
-
-
100.975
7,437
-
-
-
12,209
5,000
4,994
1.000
1,276
-
12.269
-
-
4,510
3,440
15,000
15,000
-
-
-
-
15.000
1,301
-
1^21,241
1.829
24.592
20,000
4,692
-
-
-
24,592
115,167
-
-
-
568,666
800,000
243.916
-
24,760
-
508,666
330,966
-
-
-
1.356,212
600.000
842,255
-
413,957
-
1.356,212
470,333
-
-
-
1,410,141
800,000
238.102
-
-
A372.039
1.410.141
5.979
-
-
-
9.232
5,000
3,839
-
303
-
9,232
16.125
-
-
-
43.916
30,000
10,718
-
3.198
-
43,916
2,003,320
-
-
-
5,522.916
2,500,000
1,850,000
1,672.916
-
-
6.622.916
30,513
-
-
-
86,513
30,000
5
-
6.508
-
36.518
656
i $6,000
382
-
168.674
30,000
/137.815
-
859
-
168.674
3,418
-
-
26,000
28,491
25,000
3,491
-
-
-
28,491
-
-
-
-
50,124
20,000
28,900
-
1,224
-
50,124
-
-
-
984,195
1.000,127
1,000,000
ibl27
-
-
-
1,000,127
a And snppliM. 6 Insurance policies. c Steamers. d Fixtures, etc.
e FormalsB, recipes, good^will, etc. / Seventeen shares of railroad stock. g Plant.
A And guaranty and renovating. i Franchise. j Including bonds. k Unclaimed pay roll.
172
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of CEBnpiCATES op Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
>
5
m
S
fl
1
1
o^
^M
av
O
i^
1
a
O
Parkhlll ManufactnriDg
Company, .
Parlor Pride Mannfact-
urlng Company, The,
Parsons Paper Company,
Parsons Paper Company,
Number Two, .
Paul Wbllin Manufact-
uring Company, .
Peabody Mills,
Peabody-Wbitney Com-
pany, . . . .
Pearl Street Association,
Tbe, . . . .
Pearson Box and Mould-
ing Company,
Pearson Cordage Com-
pany, . . . .
Peek and Wbipple Com-
pany, . . . .
Peot Valve Company, .
Peirce and Winn Com-
pany, . . . .
Pcmberton Company, .
Peralgewasset and Baco
Land and Lumber
Company, .
People's Co-operative
Association,
People's Ice Company, .
People'sSteamboatCom-
pany, ....
People's StoreCompany,
The, . . • .
Pepperell Card and Pa-
per Company, Tbe, .
Peltee Macblne Works, .
Pbelps Publlsbing Com-
pany, ....
Pbeniz Plate Company,
The
1894.
July 26,
Feb. 14,
Feb. 2,
Feb. 2,
Jan. 24,
Jan. 8,
Feb. 9,
Jan. 13,
Aug. 6,
Jan. 15,
Apr. 17,
Sept. 29,
May 24,
Aug. 25,
Jan. 11,
Mar. 19,
June 5,
Feb. 17,
June 21,
Mar. 15,
June 25,
Nov. 12,
May 22,
1894.
July 9,
Feb. 6,
Jan. 26,
Jan. 25,
Jan. 18,
1898.
Deo. fi,
1894.
Jan. 26,
1898.
Dec. 30,
1894.
July 25,
Jan. 16,
1898.
Dec. 20,
1894.
May 30,
a Apr. 16,
July 31,
1893.
a Deo. 2,
1894.
a Feb. 26,
Apr. 9,
a Jan. 17,
Mar. 12,
Feb. 21,
June 6,
Oct. 27,
May 14,
$300,000
40,000
60,000
300,000
260,000
297,500
40,000
30,000
5,000
600,000
60,000
150,000
80,000
450,000
21,600
1,035
100,000
16,000
17,000
76,000
200,000
200,000
86,000
AS8BT8.
s
•
^c
•
1
•
c
v4
"O h
2
JO
3*
S3
9
n
s
$300,000
868,660
881,171
116,710
300,000
67,100
173,000
10,600
601,938
12,000
164,919
101,401
17,000
with
with
with
$21,286
with
20,100
real
$3,000
R* E.
real
94,474
real
38,000
with
with
with
with
R.B.
real
6 7,361
R.B.
26,263
real
estate
$l,flM
120,000
eatate
133,684
estate
a
3 «
a
$114,316
19,886
438,638
150.726
S8.T60
110,446
33.058
-
7,670
6,000
1,747
827,000
280,006
14,000
19,006
4.700
26.467
eatate
62.066
-
1,46B
10,088
-
-
1,174
47,371
39,243
esute
146,889
26,761
96,165
-
8,131
a Adjourned.
b Boat.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
173
of CorporaUona — Continued.
Abssts — Con.
Liabilities.
sSi
las.
nil
1A
■
1
2
1
•
•
i
1
3
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
1
•
.14
1
1
•
■g
i
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
3 .
$413J5B
-
a$10,000
-
$838,075
$800,000
$226,674
-
$812,401
-
$838,075
6.610
$10,000
675
-
40,706
40,000
6,807
-
3,808
-
40,705
88,682
-
200,000
-
1,200,810
60,000
00,831
-
800,070
$150,000
1,200,810
167,851
-
-
-
640,747
300,000
840,747
-
-
-
640,747
135,453
-
-
-
413,607
260,000
177,402
-
-
427,402
07,813
-
23,611
-
531,270
207,500
156,014
-
16,148
60,708
631,270
73,866
-
-
-
06,024
40,000
56,820
-
-
104
06,024
-
-
-
-
74,770
80.000
40,038
-
3,832
^
74,770
1.000
-
& 1,000
-
8,747
6,000
1,868
-
1,880
^
8,747
121,610
-
-
-
860,615
500,000
360,615
-
-
-
860,615
37,622
4,660
$130,182
214,460
150,000
64,460
-
-
-
214,460
15,560
-
-
-
67,226
30,000
21,830
-
5,800
-
57,226
431,465
-
-
0,383
1,004,862
450,000
554,852
-
-
-
1,004,852
-
-
-
-
21,600
-
-
-
-
21,600
1.386
•
-
c60
-
2,008
1,036
1,240
-
624
-
2,008
-
-
104,106
104,106
100,000
4,106
-
-
-
104,106
2,615
-
-
-
20,004
15,000
4,118
-
076
■ -
20,004
5,736
-
-
18,010
17,000
-
-
510
1,400
18,010
30,107
-
-
-
141,084
70,800
112,108
-
-
-
182,008
34,840
-
42,076
-
878,723
200,000
rfll2,000
20,835
1 -
44,088
-
378,723
5,820
-
67,867
16,768
312,771
1 200,000
112,771
-
-
-
312,771
10,288
-
1
-
35,410
' 35,000
1
410
-
-
-
35,410
a One hundred shares Parkhill Manufacturing Co. stock,
c Block held by association.
b Horses and wagons, etc.
d Cash borrowed.
174
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates op Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
00
^
s
•
g
i
1
"5
•3
«
g=
•s
Phillips Manufacturing
Company, The, .
Phillips Woolen Com-
pany, ....
Phllllpston Co-operative
Creamery Company,
The, ....
PhoBnlz Hall Asaoola-
tlon, . . . .
Phoenix Rattan Com-
pany, The, .
Pierce and Bushnell
Manufacturing Com-
pany, . . . •
Pierce Construction
Company, .
Pierce Hardware Com-
pany, The, ...
Pierce Manufacturing
Corporation,
Pigeon Hill Granite Com-
pany, . . . .
Pilgrim Fathers Hall As-
sociation,
Pinkham & Willis Com-
pany, • . . .
Pittsfield Coal Oas Com-
pany, . . . .
PitUfleld Electric Com-
pany, . . . .
Pittsfield Manufacturing
Company, The, .
PitUfleld Steam Power
Company, The, .
Pittofield Transportation
Company, .
Plymouth Cordage Com-
pany, . . . .
Plymouth County Co op-
erative Creamery Com-
pany, . . . .
Plymouth Electric Light
Company, .
Plymouth Foundry Com-
pany, . . , .
1804.
Apr. 80
June 2
Jan. 16
Feb. 14
July 26
May 2
Apr. 2
Apr. 6
Mar. 10
July 10,
June 26
Mar. 8
Sept. 12,
Aug. 20
Feb. 23
Aug. 28
May 21
Sept. 29
Apr. 6
Feb. 16,
Apr. 2S,
1894.
Mar. 31,
Jan. 20,
1893.
Nov. 22,
1894.
Jan. 15,
July 23,
Mar. 26,
Jan. 30,
Mar. 28,
Feb. 20,
Feb. 27,
Jan. 2,
Mar. 5,
July 31,
July 2ft.
Feb. 7,
July 25,
May 9,
&Bept.28,
Apr. 2,
Jan. 17,
Feb. 6,
8 "
JM &
o o
$26,000
50,000
1,500
10,000
5,000
80,000
9,000
25,000
600,000
80,000
15,000
60,000
62,500
100,000
15,000
20,000
9,000
1,000,000
3,000
90,000
50,000
ASSBTS.
•
•
1
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
1
•
1.
3
-
-
$1,100
$43,901
$40,000
$10,000
$30,000
86,000
-
-
-
-
860
800
10,000
1,000
9,000
-
852
-
-
-
7,386
17,300
7,000
with
R. E.
3,227
28,001
-
400
-
143
1,800
-
-
-
-
17,120
192,510
with
R.E.
670.421
68,531
29,840
with
R.E.
12,750
46,088
-
-
40,878
-
168
348
with
R.B.
-
18,622
30,651
7,000
23,651
64,840
24,140
40,965
11,821
29,144
a 151,283
6,221
-
-
-
80,686
7,604
18,600
with
R.E.
1,600
S,37S
23,000
8,000
15,000
-
864
268,118
12,568
255,550
361,671
875,073
2,350
-
-
650
-
14,472
2,464
12,008
88,656
$,275
5,000
with
R.B.
1,000
47.402
a Lines, etc., etc.
b Statement of Aug. 1, 1804.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
175
of CorporcUums — Continued.
iU
s cs a
5 (• o
S3
cl24(D •
$18,855
16/i60
13,019
3,457
19,859
341,430
7,408
74,097
2,478
5,884
4,074
672,866
4,305
64,311
AtSETS — OOD.
s
P
o
3
«3
3
O
$25,000
$2,500
$181
, al4,000
1 & 2,120
2,504
7,882
27,138
« 4,237
8,202
39,880
/ 8,000 ^29,741
i 1,000
27,9«2
$68,946
100,000
1,150
10,852
41,136
75,659
10,804
44,861
1,062,892
124,124
45,278
92,967
119,640
200,047
44,214
26,446
23,364
2,207,558
3,000
176,411
118,803
Liabilities.
M
o
a
OQ
§•
o
3
$25,000 $12,585
50,000
1,500
10,000
5,000
50,000
760
27,197
( c 7,000
30,000 ' d 26,700
( 10,846
9,000
25,000
1,600
16,999
600,000 417,117
30,000 , 32,799
14,674 I
50,000
62,500
100,000
15,000
20,000
9,000
1,000,000
3,000
25.000 i t
<2 5,000 i
90,000
S
t
I
42,041
100
83,068
11,072
6,446
14,000
555,387
210
A80!000 I *^^^^
50,000 43,000
o
j» a
PQ
9
P .
88
O
$14,361
852
8,939
204
2,862
33,775
604
926
17,040
17,879
12,085
364
652,171
25,803
$12,000 $63,946
100,000
2,250
10,852
41,136
1,613 ' 75,650
I
10,804
44,861
12,000
1,062,892
61,325 124,124
- ' 45,278
40,000
6,057
92,967
119,640
200,947
44,214
26,446
23,364
2,207,558
3,210
176,411
118,803
a Permuient plant.
e TlxtnrM and fumitare.
A BoDdfl.
b Improvement account.
/ FraDchifle.
i Earning* unpaid.
c On real estate.
g Lines.
j Patterns.
// Bills payable.
176
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Ceutificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
a
is
S
M
s
a
s
S
« .
>l
?^
•s
i^
1
fr
Q
M 9*
o o
Plymouth Gaa Light
Company, .
Plymouth Mills, .
Plymouth Preserving
^/0«f ft • • •
Plymouth Rook Boot
and Shoe Company,
The, • • • •
Plymouth Woollen and
Cotton Factory, The, .
Pocaaset Manufacturing
Company, The, .
Point of Pines Company,
Pomeroy Mining Com-
pany, ....
Pomeroy Woolen Com-
pany, ....
Pope's Island Manufact-
uring Corporation,
Post Printing Company,
Post Publishing Com-
pany, ....
Potomska Mills Corpora-
tion, «...
Potter Drug and Chemi-
cal Corporation, .
Powell Planer Company,
The, ....
Powow Hill Water Com-
pany, ....
Prang Educational Com-
pany, The, .
Pranker Manufacturing
Company, .
Presbrey Stove Lining
Company, .
Preston Manufacturing
Company, .
Prospect Worsted Mills,
Prout Brothers' Granite
Company, .
Prouty Wire Company,
18M.
Sept. 6,
Nov. 21,
Feb. 14,
Feb. 28,
June 13,
Feb. 28,
July IB,
1894.
July 11,
July 25,
1893.
aSept.ll,
Oct. 16,
1894.
June 1,
Feb. 22,
a Jan. 2,
July 12, July 11,
May 5,
Mar. 12,
May 23,
Bept. 17,
Apr. 10,
1893.
Deo. 6,
1894.
Jan. 13,
May 19,
Aug. 7, June 28,
May 16,
Jan. 22,
Jan. 23,
July 26,
Mar. 22,
May 15,
May 8,
Mar. 28,
Mar. 14,
Oct. 16,
Jan. 26,
Jan. 17,
Jan. 2,
Jan. 25,
Mar. 8,
May 9,
Apr. 16,
Mar. 5,
Mar. 6,
July 10,
$40,000
69,000
7,600
25,000
50,000
600,000
150,000
5,000
75,000
65,000
11,000
300,000
1,200,000
200,000
10,000
60,000
100.000
60,000
28,000
5,000
150,000
20,000
20,000
A88BT8.
6
I
■a u
8)
9
p
a
•o
a
..i.
«
0
at
n
a
$8,850
14,000
10,000
316,360
97,800
$1,000
with
152,360
86,500
61,295
15,560
454,923
41,300
$7,850
18,250
8,000
8,000
18,200
10,761
13,200
with
18,300
R.B.
163,000
61,800
8,000
43,045
7,560
R. A.
23,000
with
R.E.
0,600
2,900
55,000
1,261
10,300
$15,000
15,000
10,000
285,540
5
•^ J.
it V
J3 O
5*
$3,410
20,331
3,050
1.601
29,591
1,000
-
12,000
n\
41,186
2,390
13,842
2,9»
5,600
2,585
31,500
57,716
694,904
226,703
7,000
160,144
7,600
11,605
15,000
3,594
-
61 ..MK)
19,706
6,577
5,000
30,S37
-
1>»
65,000
87,2>7
5,500
2,333
4,000
6,0f.^
a Should have been held.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 10.
177
of Corporationa — Continued.
AsaxTB— Con.
Liabilities.
SaoDS
Patent Bigbu.
•
1 •
1
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
•
1
•
1
3
DebU.
1
•
S
1
8 .
n
$1,671
, Reserve for De-
' 1 preclatlon.
1
1
Total.
$M1
.
a $16,650
«
$44,361
$40,000
$2,680
.
$44,351
25,609
-
-
-
84,000
60,000
15,000
-
-
84,000
400
-
-
$4,496
7,945
7.500
445
-
-
7,945
-
-
-
20,400
20,400
20,400
•
-
-
20,400
13,877
-
2,247
24,020
61,754
50,000
11,754
-
-
61,754
202,055
-
-
-
922,546
600,000
287,742
-
34,804
-
922,546
2,000
-
-
125,508
220,303
160,000
76,303
-
-
-
226,308
814
-
20,000
15,216
51,764
6,000
46,764
-
-
-
51,764
99,0M
-
1,299
14,404
219,710
75,000
144,710
-
-
-
219,710
0,570
ft $40,000
-
7,084
88,940
64,800
34,140
-
-
-
88,940
-
-
-
12,683
20,718
11,000
9,718
-
-
-
20,718
21,000
-
c 45,000
197,917
353,183
251,450
d 5,285
6 96,398
■
-
-
353,133
504,M8
-
2,861
-"
1,973,929
1,200,000
\ 509,338
//24,000
1 -
240,596
-
1,973,929
00,048
-
63,816
-
371,806
200,000
171,308
-
-
-
371,308
1,6m
-
-
-
20,641
10,000
10,641
-
-
-
20,641
-
-
^02,896
-
118,990
60,000
A40,000
-
18,990
-
118,990
88,580
-)
i 78,710
4,108
1
233,057
100,000
133,015
-
42
-
233,057
302,866
-
-
19,224
247,373
60.000
J187,373
-
-
-
247,373
31,610
-
1,600
-
77,153
28,000
13,554
k $1,680
33,919
77,153
~
-
-
-
150
5,000
125
-
-
-
6,125
21,678
-
-
-
228,075
150,000
44,233
-
9,000
$25,742
228,975
.
-
400
3,037
22,031
20,000
2,031
-
-
-
22,031
5,202
-
997
28,467
20,000
6,271
-
2,196
1
2S,467
a ICaliM and metors.
d Bllla payable.
g Water pfpM, hydranU,etc.
) Inclodlog advanccB on goods.
b Proceaaea.
e Bonda and notea.
A Bonds.
k Dividend paid.
c Francbises, leasen, etc.
/ Unpaid dividend.
i Publiabing plant.
178
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Ahdract of Certificates op Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
«0
«s
^
5
•
S
a
«3
s
O^
<M
e 9
o
W
1
ProvideDce Telephone
Company of MaBsacbu-
Bctts (for 1893), .
Providence Telephone
Company of Mi
lassa-
chnaetts,
Provincetown Cold Stor-
age Co.,
Puritan Manufacturing
Company, .
Putnam and Sprague
Company, .
Putnam Machine Com-
pany, ....
Putnam Nail Company,
The, ....
Pyro-Fcbrin Company,
The
Quaboag Steamboat Com-
pany, The, .
Quincy and Nantasket
Steamboat Company,
Quincy ElectricLightand
Power Company, The,
Quincy Market Cold
Storage Company,
Quinalgamond Co-opera-
tive Baking Company,
Quinalgamond Co-opera-
tive Meat Market,
R. A. McWhirr Com-
pany, The, .
R.H. Smith Manufactur-
ing Company, The, .
Randolph Power Com.
pany. The, .
Raya Woollen Company,
Reading Electric Light
and Power Company, .
Reading Lyceum Hall
AsBociation,
Reading Masonic Tem-
ple Corporation, .
Reading Rubber Manu-
facturing Company, .
1894.
Jan. 9
Dec. 5
Apr. 27
July 16
Jan. 19
Apr. 30
Feb. 6
Jan. 29,
Oct. 3
Dec. 7
Aug. 17
May 9
Mar. 6,
Mar. 14
Mar. 15
Aug. 16,
Mar. 27
Feb. 27
Feb. 16
May 8
Apr. 20
Sept. 20
1893.
Dec. 5,
1894.
Dec. 4,
Apr.
9.
July
10,
Jan.
1.
Apr.
11.
Jan.
17.
a Jan.
17,
ft Jan.
6.
Nov.
5.
June 27,
Apr.
24,
Feb.
15.
Jan.
20.
Feb.
20.
A July
31.
Jan. 2,
Jan. 27,
1893.
Dec. 14.
1894.
May 7,
Mar. 27.
Sept. 5,
S **
o J:
o o
$10,000
10,000
15,000
26.000
40.000
100.000
300.000
0.000
5.100
25.000
ASSBT8.
«0
1
^c
.
%,l
•
•
E?
5 o
te
•
*£
a
a
v4
2
1^
n
s
$7,500
100.675
121.000
10.200
100.000 I 10.591
500,000 415.400
1.600
8,000
60.000
20.000
6,600
800.000
25.000
25.000
40.000
100,000
5.000
5,600
200.000
64,231
34.198
10.600
37.000
• 9
"I
IS
-
-
-
with
R.E.
$7,500
with
R. B.
145,731
-
-
175,000
-
-
e 5,000
$7,500
d $2,700
-
with
R.E.
e 55.098
/ 59,928
120,400
295.000
60.000
2,000
3.000
^2.120
^
^
7.050
400
5,200
1.900
with
real
eatate
with
R* B.
7.050
5,000
11.000
-
7,000
80.000
-
-
-
72,825
$2,050
1,450
1.9D6
7,418
17,435
32,122
53,477
1,376
2,0e3
j 2,279
87,801
3,983
3,541
26,736
6,370
799
a00,109
673
11.796
a Poatponed from Dec. 8. 1893. b Should have been held. c Boata. etc.
d And wharves. e Electric and ateam machinery. / Llnea. metera, etc
g Teams, etc. A Adjourned.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
179
of Corporations — Continaed.
AssBTS^Oon.
Z m a
•
m
•
I
0
8
Is
g
8^
1
1
II
A*
:4
n
$6,604
3i,5ie
244,298
2U,7eO
200
$14,070
1,682
960
238
57,600
10,248
261,442
23,706
3,752
a $10,000
-
al0,000
-
568
-
-
$5,432
338
-
-
707
100
-
c20,600
-
1,602
275
6,367
-
-
505
50
3,000
-
4,154
1,383
LlABILITIXS.
O
•
M
9
3
GQ
^^
5
•
5
o.
J3
«
9
o
P
9
t
9
Profit
B8.
or De-
OD.
Q
^S
anoe
nd L
11
n
b
$12,050
11,460
16,776
83,424
48,951
523,164
584,237
6,104
5,100 '
!
32,763 '
129,578 I
533,201
12,063
5,656
90,712
24,773
8,209
725,782
42,571
$10,000
10.000
15,000
26,000
40,000
160,000
300,000
6,000
5,100
25,000
89,700
500,000
1,600
3,000
60,000
20,000
5,600
300,000
17,900
16,000 18,480
40,000 40,000
113,363 I 100,000
$7,424
5.000
77,177
156,526
104
7,527
29,550
175,000
(28.174
2,656
17,093
4,773
500
180,000
24,671
1,500
13,368
-
$2,050
-
1,450
ft $750
1,026
-
3,270
-
285,987
127,711
„,
"•
236
-
10,328
-
2,060
-
13,619
^
1,699
—
180,782
-
1,620
-
-
$681
5
o
$12,050
11,450
16,776
33,424
48,951
523,104
584,237
6,104
5,100
32,763
129,578
675,000
229
12,063
-
5,656
-
90,712
-
24,773
500
8,299
65,000
725,782
-
42,571
-
16,600
-
40,000
-
113,363
a Plant, — llnea In &(aMachasetta.
e Steamboat.
b Dividend.
d Inelading mortgage on real eatate of $4,410.
ANNUAL RETURNS OP CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cebtificites of Cohditioh
h
a
A.««.
r
1
i
s
1
t
1
1
1^
Real RaUts ind Bullcl-
Itig Company, . .
lOM.
Apr. 13.
Jan. 16,
•S00.100
•84.880
.
♦42.391
liul EaUte EichoDga
IO.O0O
00,000
138,000
»ao.«io
1106,000
BrWl
Jun* B,
Uay 11,
161
«cSX, '■■""""
Uay M,
Jan. 16,
0.000
aWoo
1»
Reed tind BirUo Cor-
pomtloD. . . .
AD(. «,
Uay IS,
000.000
160,000
-
T6.000
tUfiX
Prinltng Company, .
Apr. 4.
ftFeb.ar,
8.000
-
2,000
Ran f rev UannfacLnilng
Company, .
May a.
Apr. 3.
i.a».ooo
1 40S.IHT
ieM.3M
I-
B.X.
TOT,810|
1)371.000 ,
R^ubUcan Company,
Feb. 3.
Jan. 2S.
30.000
110,000
80.000
00,000
30.000
M,9SJ
Revere Coppertk.mp«,,,
sw...
fiMayS.
300,0l»
100,000
wim
no]
MUM
87.111
"toTof^bT: ''":'""■.
Mar. 9,
Uar. B,
wfioo
a2T,600
with
R.B.
4.431
RoYO reRubbarConipBny,
Fob. 1.
Jan. 17.
ifloofioa
»!,T6B
wlUi
R.E.
3M,M«
380,011
July 13,
Fab. 14.
i2$.ooa
33.000
28,000
8.000
aaBI,4M
l^-»
80.000
60.SO0
witb
olth
R.B.
B.E.
36.584
10.317
Itlce and Oiiffld Ubud-
lacla ring Company, .
Feb. 3,
u.ooo
ST.W1
Rice tfc lAckwood Lum-
ber Compwiy, . .
Fab. K.
6 Feb. 10.
M.OOO
-
»,05]
Rl^e Kond.» Comply,
Nov. 30.
Nov. II.
iw,ooo
.
.
.
»»,0»9
facluiini Canpany, .
Nov. ]&.
Nov. 13.
800,000 1
/.^■ss
|.»
R.B.
783.081
06.TM
100,000
110,000
S,<)W)
18,000
6,381
8.fl!«
10.1M
Ulebardaon Piano Cue
Richmond Iron Worke,
Jaly la.
July 11.
M,000
Rid g way Furnaca Com-
J
-
-
7,a«.
11 r*
Rlnley Holland Uanu-
Uar. 21.
Feb. ai.
108,000
60JW0
cSm^oy."^""™*"!
May 81,
Uay 11,
1,800,000
1,»»,4S«
-
-
-
3»,S7I
TucUooorilD. 6mlll.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
181
of Corporcitions — Continued.
A88BT8 — Con.
LlikBILITIBS.
115
•
1
s
a
1
•
0
s
a
*
IS
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
•
t
m
3
t
•
1
1
Balance Profit
and Loeis.
Reserve for De-
predation.
•
1
-
-
1
$100
$78,059
$200,100
$200,100
1
-
-
-
-
$200,100
-
-
a 3,634
1,403
10,000
10,000
-
-
-
-
10,000
-
-
- ■
50,789
185.960
90.000
$95,950
-
-
-
185.960
$575
♦2.600
-
3,715
7,816
6,000
1,316
-
-
-
7,316
550,267
-
38,621
-
1,008,114
600,000
498.114
-
-■
1,098,114
-
-
1,000
-
3.000
3,000
-
-
-
-
8,000
168,657
j
ft 17.225
c 2,100
1,971,689
1,200,000
605,581
-
$166,108
-
1,971.689
1,388
-
9.083
-
166,418
30,000
99,427
-
86,991
166,418
185,510
_
43,771
-
38(V,393
300,000
85,000
-
1,898
386,893
-
-
21.384
-
253.815
160,000
-
-
98,815
-
268,815
1.106.S50
9,193
-
-
2.284,655
1,000,000
882,389
-
402.266
-
2,284,666
-
-
55.535
341,829
125,000|
</213,900
2,429
i -
-
341,829
109,176
80.000
17,328
-
324,478
250,000
54,163
-
20,310
-
324,478
22,090
-
-
-
119,640
55.000
49,550
-
16,090
119,640
24.926
-
105
-
108,082
25,000
62,992
-
10.090
$10,000
108,082
49.151
-
-
-
268,200
160,000
117,339
-
-
861
268,200
110.597
-
-
-
1.265.953
800,000
156,550
-
309,403
-
1,266,963
87.377
-
1,438
-
371,788
100,000
11,782
-
259,956 j
with bal.
P.fcL.
371,738
15^10
-
2,922
-
58,470
30,000
27,425
-
1,045
-
58,470
105.935
1
35,000
6,974
312.444
54.000
268,444
-
-
-
312,444
6,832
4,000
9.027
419
82,053
20,000
12,053
-
-
92,053
90,687
1
11.447
-
166,284
108.000
9,869
-
-
48,916
166,284
-
1
-
« 70.711
1,386,008
1,333,000
-
-
/ 8.008
-
1,336,008
a Plant.
d Bonds and notes.
b Stocks.
€ Balance expense account.
c Treasury stock.
/ Balance income.
ANNUAL EBTURNS OP CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates or CoNDrnoN
1?
1^
RlnrdilaUIIJi.Tlw, . 1
RlTanldt Co-op»r«itTO ]
Co-op»r«itTO
it.ooo
owoo
pioj,
KeUogg Cam-
Woika
UobeMD Milli,
RoblnuD Iron Compu;,
RablnMii PilDdng Com-
P»ny, .
RiKklud Compinj,
RocklMd Hotel Com-
puiy. .
Koekporl armnlt
pmojol Huuct
Rock; llendow
300.000
10,000
1, JlD. 10,
I, AJulrST,
Uar. B, Jn. S,
1TS,S37
n^ooo
ls,ooa
RonllLaril Held Com'
p">y
Roibnrr Carpel Com-
puy. ....
Boibur; CcDtnl Wlurl,
KoiburyGu Light Com-
P»ny
Roibary Sione Com-
Iwnf.The, . . .
Aai- IS, I Jal; U,
June 0, May 10,
160,000
iOfiM
10,000
U.iOO
276,400
S,W1
c Debt! recelTibls lubyct to dlKeunt lor ea
A Adjonmed; alatemeDi of JnoaW, ISBS.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
183
of Corporations — Continued.
A88STS— Con.
LxABiLrrnss.
ill
Hi
Patent RigbU.
•
•
a
o
«
1
1
■
3
1
Balance Profit
and LoM.
•
O
CapiUl Stock.
Debts.
■
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
I
- •
-
$456
-
$47,500
$47,500
-
-
$47,600
^8.574
mm
305
-
27,623
12.255
$10,520
$1,055
$8,693
27,523
08,440
-
-
-
763,865
500,000
221,075
-
-
41,800
763,865
-
-
-
$4,800
10,700
10,000
700
-
-
-
10,700
60
$500
-
4,331
6,000
5,000
-
-
-
-
6,000
41,973
-
12,238
-
246,448
1
100,000
136,201
-
-
9,247
246,448
24,480
-
851
-
06,025
40,000
33,078
-
21,047
-
95,925
85,127
-
3,000
-^
377,511 1
260,000
101,760
-
15.742
-
377,611
9,271
-
-
-
75,866
70,000
628
-
6,327
-
76,865
1,200
-
-
-
26,770
20,000
6,630
-
140
-
26,779
28,183
-
510
-
150,210
50,000
61,725
-
-
a 47,494
159,219
-
-
b 20.371
5,790
180,674 1
1
85,000
05,674
-
-
-
180,674
82,739
-
27,160
-
806,707
200,000
154,700
-
-
41,998
396,707
I
-
-
13,640
28,540
25,600
2,040
-
-
-
28,640
41,467
-
-
227,360
75,000
12,500
c $44,014
50,937
, 44,000
227,360
7,277 1
-
-
-
11,774 '
8,000
2,851
130
784
-
11,774
1
272,.'t91
-
-
-
1,341,732
750,000
679,360
-
12,372
-
1,341,732
(
-
-
-
21,440
20,000
-
-
1,440
-
21,449
1
.».718
400
( (12,000
\ 0350
2,668
1
14,855
1
10,000
4,855
-
-
-
14,865
272,558 ■
-
1,454
-
1,164,050
43,400
87,604
-
1,083,055
-
1,164,059
-
-
-
-
325,400
275,400
50,000
-
-
-
326,400
5,003 '
50,000
-
-
1,018,370
000,000
14,174
404,205
1,018,379
-
-
-
10,591
5,000
3,600
1
" 1
-
1,991
10.591
a And discount on debts recclvalih*.
d Stock In treasury.
It ]C<iiiipment.
e OtUce furnitare.
c Surplus capital.
184 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of CERnncATEs op Condition
NAME OF OORPO-
BATION.
s
I
«
a «
I S
I ^
O
I 9
n
Boy 00 Laandry Com-
pany, The, .
Rubber Footwear Com-
pany, The, .
Ruddy Thread Com-
pany, The, .
Rusiell MUlB, .
Rnasell Paper Com-
pany, ....
Russia Cement Com-
pany, ....
Rust and Richardson
Drug Company, .
9. A. Woods Machine
Company, .
8. H. Howe Shoe Com-
pany, The,
B. K. Edwards Hall Com-
pany, . . . .
8. M. Howea Company,
The, ....
8. N. & C. Russell Man-
u fact u ring Company, .
8. R. Nlles Advertising
Agency, The,
8. Worthlngton Paper
Company, .
Sagamore Manufactur-
ing Company,
Salvm and South Dan-
vers Oil Company,
Salem, Beverly and Dan-
vers Towboat Com-
pany, The, .
Salem Building Associa-
tion, The, .
Salem Electric Lighting
Company, The, .
Salem Oas Light Com-
pany
Balem Lead Company, .
Salem Mechanic Hall
Corporation,
1
18M.
July 13,
1894.
Mar. 2,
June 14,
Apr. 4,
Aug. 21,
July 11.
May 11,
May 2.
Sept. 4,
Aug. 81,
Apr. 6,
Feb. 21,
Apr. 2,
Mar. 23,
Aug. 7,
Feb. 12,
Dec. 6,
Nov. 6,
Mar. 5,
Jan. 2,
Mar. 19,
Feb. 21,
June 27,
May 81,
June 4,
May 6,
May 4,
Apr. 24,
Nov. 23,
Oct. 24,
Mar. 28,
Feb. 20,
Aug. 13,
June 1,
June 22,
a
Feb. 12,
Jan. 17,
Mar. 10,
Feb. 12,
Feb. 0,
Jan. 16,
June 9,
Jan. 4,
1
•gd
83
3"
2
i
-a
^16,000
5,000
30,000
I
125,000 I $21,377
200,000
100,000
75,000
300,000
200,000
8,000
24,000
100,000
80,000
20,000
900,000
48,000
9,800
27,400
175,000
300,000
5,000
49,000
146,000
44,000
43,450
67,800
44,827
337,000
6,900
47,687
45,550
27,000
ASSBTS.
•
1
^^
and
Powe
i
a
•mm
6
9
a
•O fa
•o
XI
2'
1
s
^
$5,000
with
$7,922
R. £.
21,000 $125,000
4,000
10,663
13,000
14,827
40,000
5,000
108.623
104,000
35,000
32,787 51,170
54,800 57,200
26,579
30,000 30,000
40,000 297,000
8,600
3,215
with
3,300
with
44,472
R. E.
152,504
B.E.
633,000
2,700
5,606
6 223,809
181,976
5
$3.43S
6,000
25,364
1,871
00,738
34,313
33,880
96,94.3
261,796
1,160
24,262
77,662
92,970
84,'J£)<
102,816
29,602
302
1«.
20,898
6,01 iO
6,12S
a No meeting held ; sutement of May 1, 1894.
b Lines, etc.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
oj Corporations — Continued.
III!
$15,617
61,874
287,074
70,095
65,498
136.611
263»2S7
21,468
110,397
2,793
18,033
115,802
15,196
11,032
17.516
AS8BT8 — Cod.
Ltabilitibs.
5
•
0
8
Profit
s
,5
0
s
•
-2
88 ^
i
PQ
$7,078
3,675
12,215
59,121
$5,000 37,006
10,660
1,621
c 3.000
1,004
(2 3,000
1,475
o
M
o
o
■»*
QQ
•1
O
3
$18,438 $15,000
5,000
5,000
54,576 1 1 30,000
200,960 I 125,000
$3,047
16,519
60,320
636,033 I' 200,000 378,925
183,408 I 100,000
99,378 j 60,000
370,212 II 300,000
2 .
fiuS
$391
79,592
36,884
18,374 a $8,779
650.083 200,000 ' 363,996
27,739 ,1 8,000
45,730 ,, 24,000
273,546 I' 100,000
16,000
16,068
134,240
95,763 30,000 64,287
53,950 ,, 20,000 33.950
8,057
15,640
58,008
3,816
2,494
88,206
71,087
3,739
5,602
26,935
1,476
1,664 I $6,473
1,188,208
900,000 817
62,625 1 1 48,000
14,625
I
6,800 I 9,800 ; 9,800
927
55,676 1 1 27.400
301,090 175,000
I
374,360 300,000
5,000 5,000
17,643
50,771
49,000
28,276
e 97,525
25,437
1,771
6287,391
28,565
48,932
185
£
o o
O CO
&
S
o
$4,858
15,000
12,371
$18,438
5,000
54,576
200,960
636,983
183,408
99,378
370,212
650,088
27,789
45,730
278,546
95,763
58,950
1.188,208
62,625
9,800
55,676
801,090
374,369
5,000
50,771
a For contingent fand.
d Sinking fund, 10-20 bonds
b Surplus. c Tug boat Henry Preston, 8r.
e Bonds, note and accounts.
186
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
s
a
o
s
m
Q
Salem Storage Ware-
hoaie Company, The,
BaliBbury Beach Plank
Road Company, .
Samson Cordage Works,
Bamael Ward Company,
Samnel Winslow Skate
Manufacturing Com-
pany, The, .
Sander Musleal Instru-
ment Company, The, .
Sanders BnlldlngCorpo-
ratlon, The, .
Sanford Sawtelle Com-
pany, ....
Sanford Spinning Com-
pany, ....
Sanford Whip Company,
Sanitary Manufacturing
Company, The, .
Saunders Cotton Mills,
Sawyer Leather Machin-
ery Company, The, .
Sawyer Spindle Com-
pany, . . . ■
Sazonville Mills, .
Scandinavian Co-opera-
tive Drug Company, .
Scandinavian Co-opera-
tive Grocery Union, .
Scandinavian Co-opera-
tive Mercantile Com-
pany, The, .
Sea View Hotel and
Wharf Company, The
(for 1893), .
Sea View Hotel and
Wharf Company, The,
Soaconnet Mills, .
Security Associates,
The, ....
Security Safe Deposit
Company, .
1894.
Feb. 1
May 29
Sept. 7
Aug. 16
May 11
June 12,
June 1
Sept. IT
May 17
U%r. 24
Dec. 26
May 24,
Feb. 12
May 21
Aug. 16,
Apr. 4
Mar. 14
Feb. 28
Jan. 4
Dec. 19
Nov. 23
Oct. 15
Jan. 23
1894.
Jan. 1
May 5
July 18
June 20
a May 2
Mar. 23
Mar. 27
June 0
Apr. 26,
Jan. 2,
Sept. 14
May 8
Feb. 6,
Apr. 28
July 14
Feb. 17
Feb. 17
Jan. 24
1893.
Dec. 6,
1804.
Dec. 6
Nov. 1
Jan. 10
Jan. 11
9 "
il
o
ASSSTl.
i
fee
•
n
og
&>
A
-£
a
MM
^
"2 fc
s
1
1*
a
n
a
2
$10,000
10,000
120,000 !
60,000 '
60,000 ;
80,000
80,000
10,000
600,000
6,000
176,000
10,000
200,000
85,600
4,126
4,000
10,000
66,000
27,600
600,000
100,000
200,000
$17,863 : $8,723
600
40,602
26,613
ft 80,000
80,000
260,260
250
89,434
182,180
300
with
8,888
with
12,824
10,000
with
$13,670
200
R.B.
17,676
$1,660
68,024
6,000
87,665
600
real , estate
c 889,646
70,000
R. E.
with
bld'gs
60,000
1,000
3,188
168,847
9 9
3 ^
$937
148
lS,9-22
43.380
91,343
16,.US
S,6S1
8,667
67,1 G6
with R. E.
10,000
172,180
272,467
28,907
2,190
48,253
338.158
a$4
10,110
13,500
ni
S.131
45,090
( cr4.f4M))
{ M,073>
(tf98,497>
/175,000
a Adjourned.
d Securities.
b And steam power.
e Doubtful claims.
c Mill and dye house.
/ Lease of building mod vaults.
1894.1
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
187
of Corporaiiont — Continued.
AaiBTS— Cod.
■ o X
1
■
•
0
o
Profit
M.
a
1
8*2
:3
Paten
1
:4
Balan
and
3
O
LlABILlTnS.
I
I
$38,881
d 87,727
40,438
6,901
$2,575
e $2,000
l,3ie
l<,248 !
109,010
78,790
2,822
3,800
2,156 110,000
830,428
4.003
3,427
4,244
417
tf855
1,706
/188,712
15,750
16,940
« 8,408
700
118,168
A 25,000
$328
7,852
21,013
86,260
879
67,192
19,869
$20,178
GO
3
$10,000
10,000 10,000
166,221
136,107
120,000
60,000
204,850 ' 50,000
44,369 80,000
84,036
21,622
808,137
271,957
10,000
246,539
1,104,187
8,105
80,000
10,000
488,026
5,000
175,000
10,000
200,000
85,600
4,125
14,487 , 4,000
17,744
6,910
80,745 I 83,000
27,500
617,835
167,070
200,000
27,500
1 478,270
100,000
200,000
; $828
a 9.300
ft 550
42,503
76,107
88,627
14,360
8,209
10,572
817,085
96,957
46,589
88,000
8,844
6,115
8,250
112,055
64,868
t
I
$1.9M
^2,202
2 .
8»3
n
$3,628
66,228
827
410
8,026
965,587
636
2,438
2,584
6,745
27,510
a Mortgage,
d And flxtnrea.
g Sorploa.
b Demand loan.
e Fixtures.
A Railroad bonds.
6
P .
*■> S
o o
« at
&
$640
o
$20,178
10,000
166,221
136,107
204,850
44,869
84,036
21,622
808,137
5,000
271,957
10,000
246,539
1,104,137
8,106
14,487
17,744
39,746
27,500
617,885
167,070
200,000
c Plank on road.
/ Construction mill and dye house.
188
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
s
^
5
a
^^
'S
IS
1
^
0
si
•M B<
O O
O
Assets.
5
•
Bewail and Day Cord-
age Company,
Sewing Machine Sup-
plies Company, The, .
Seymonr Enapp-War-
ren Company,
Shady Hill Narsery
Company, .
Shapleigh Coffee Com-
pany, . . . .
Sharon Water Company,
Shaw Stocking Com-
pany, . . . .
Shelbarno Falls Co-
operative Creamery
Association (for 1893),
Shelburne Falls Co-
operative Creamery
Association,
Shove Mills, .
Shreve, Crump and Low
Company, .
Sigsbee Mannfactaring
Company, The, .
Silver Grill Caf6 Com-
pany of Boston, .
Silver Lake Company, .
Simonds Mannfactaring
Company, .
Simpson Spring Com-
pany, . . . .
Simpson's Patent Dry
Dock Company, .
Singapore Rattan Com-
pany, The, .
Slngletary Co-operative
Creamery Association,
The, • . . .
S killings, Whitney s and
Barnes Lumber Com-
pany, . . . .
Slade Mills, .
Smith American Organ
and Piano Company, .
1804.
July 26
July 16,
June 20
June 28
Feb. 27
Mar. 26
May 24
Feb. 28
Nov. 2
Feb. 21
May 22
June 16
June 29,
May 9
Oct. 1
May 21
Jan. 19
June 19
Nov. 1
Aug. 9
Mar. 2
Feb. 28
1894.
Feb. 19,
July 10,
a June 2,
Feb. 7,
Jan. 27,
Mar. 13,
$200,000
60,000
16,000
75,000
75,000
20,000
May 21, 860,000
1893.
Oct. 2, 5,000
1894.
Oct 1,
6,000
Feb. 7, ! 650,000
Apr. 9, 375,000
May 25,
10,000
a Jan. 22, 25,000
Jan. 17, { 75,000
I
Sept. 17, 1 150,000
!
Jan. 16, 50,000
Jan. 8, I 350,000
Jan. 19, 42,000
Oct.
1.
3,500
May
17,
1,000,000
Jan.
30,
550,000
Jan.
24,
200,000
«
^.:
2o
i
9
a
a
•O J,
•o
4i
i'
s
$14,600
89,625
4,112
4,112
227,950
60,000
129,571
20,180
190,000
6,000
101.946
246,845
$21,000
with
with
with
with
16,000
$1,065
68,026
R.E.
R.E.
R.E.
R.E.
4,180
60,000 (1180,000
1,000 5,000
2,000
69,446 ' 32,500
74,803 171,952
$8,060
61,250
14,866
e 68,267
178,984
1,200
1,200
477,6M
60,000 4,000
795
20,000
3,594
6,888
7,600
8,000
1,500
19,000
448,116
.o .
•PI «<
$262,063
27,850
6,152
11,643
48,677
613
01,645
6,848
9S5
27,439
186,621
2S3
483
58,140
109,822
6,743
3,085
100
1,022,T18
48,563
71,035
a Adjourned.
6 And tools.
c Pipes laid and easements.
d And docks.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
189
of Gorporatuma — Continued.
ASBSTB — Con.
1
LlABlUTIEB.
•
•a
s
a
1
«
m
a
%
1
i
Balance Profit
and Loss.
1
1
1
•
3
o
Capital Stock.
•
.o
•
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
3
o
H
$126,032
-
-
$377,096
$200,000
$126,783
-
$60,312
-
$877,095
42,449
$680
a $36,600
-
106,479
60,000
46,997
-
4,482
$5,000
106,479
4,637
-
-
$7,426
20,274
15,000
5,274
-
-
-
20,274
110,908
^
-
144,201
76,000
30,684
$26,111
12,466
-
144,201
37,^4
-
20,962
-
122,368
76,000
42,208
•
2,250
2,910
122,368
-
-
-
-
64.935
20,000
26,800
9,135
-
64,935
99,589
10,000
2,800
-
467,493
360,000
9,019
-
28,800
69,674
467,403
422
-
676
6560
j so
13,838
6,000
*
8,888
-
-
-
13,888
-
-
652
-
6,890
4,460
1.484
-
966
.
6,899
173,998
-
-
-
907,083
660,000
187,584
-
169,549
-
907,083
426,100
-
10,428
-
605,149
376,000
304,668
•
16,491
f _^
695,149
2,910
-
-
10,663
14,551
10,000
4,661
-
-
-
14,561
1.600
"
c 8,306
d 9,000
1 17.941
82,179
20,800
11,879
-
-
-
32,179
78,081
-
3,966
-
220,137
76,000
15,233
-
129,904
with bal.
P.&L.
220,137
201,034
-
12,309
-
466,330
160,000
132,226
-
174,105
-
456,330
17,490
16,248
6,821
73,820
50,000
28,320
-
-
-
73,320
-
-
-
244,415
445,000
350,000
095,000
-
-
-
446,000
17,760
-
-
41,808
68,668
42,000
26,668
-
-
-
68,668
-
-
•
-
3,500
3,500
-
-
-
3,600
1,133»466
-
30,024
-
2,307,154
1,000,000
985,280
.
250,000
121,924
2,307,154
93,053
-
-
-
837,466
550,000
284,468
-
2,998
-
837,466
1,700
-
207,974
280,769
200,000
80,700
-
-
280,769
a Br»i»eb houses capital Invested. b Unsold stock. c Constmctlon, eqalpment and soda fountain.
d Lease. <* Mortgage bonds.
, RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
AbatraU of Certipicatbs of Conditiok
1
i'
I
1
1
AlSITS
Si
t
1
1
1
P^ny
ISM.
May 4,
jriT,
»»M,000
.«„
•13.60O
•331,406
Sinllb nDtl Dare Uun-
taoturinK Compmny,
Mm. is.
Feb. 18.
HO.OM
147,462
Wltb
B.B.
03,800
T0,0«3
Bmltb and BIonghloD
June a.
M.r 8,
M,000
SVi«
amltb CirlatODlraaCo.,
Apr. 1«,
Jan. IT,
100.000
T3,«0T
IM"
70.3M
9mllb.Foit.rBhoBC<nn.
PMIJ'
Jdm 4,
Feb. I,
12.000
<>B,084
13,0«
Bmith HeMlDg iDd Ven-
llJatlng Uompin;, .
Jnly IJ.
Ifar. •.
■»,000
21,-30
Smlib I^iptr UODi|»ny,
Feb. 21,
Jul. SI,
au,iMo
«,o«o
t2..000
t43.000
7S.00O
«,031
pmy. ....
JUM »,
Feb. 22,
,.».
1.000
with
R.E.
600
,
Oompwy, . . .
July 13.
lau.
July ».
12.W0
1.000
2,000
1,000
10.166
p.ny. The, . . .
D«. 14,
uw.
30.tno
3.41S
.
.
8.««4
So QiErvlUe Klcetric LIgbl
Con.p.11,, Tha. . .
Mar. W.
yir-fi.
200,000
fflwl
wllb
B.B.
2»1,T33
18.32T
Bomenlilii Joutnil Com.
P"y
JaD. IS,
Jan. 6,
10,000
.
.
.
eS.643
6.301
aomflrvlll* DdIob Hitl
CompuT, . . .
Oct. U,
Got. 1.
».D00
39.000
8.000
30.000
am
fionla PUno & Omo
Apr. 14.
Feb. IS,
30,000
M.0*:
Bod Lb Atalngton Bbo*
Factory Company,
June a.
Apr. M.
23,100
u,«oo
witb
R. B.
1,300
1.014
South Ba; Compui)', .
Jooe 6.
<iJnDe4.
w,ooo
33^
BoDih Bay Improvement
Bept.M.
MayV
38,.I»
320.3W
-
.
83
BoDlb Boaton BnUdlBg
Uar. 33,
1SH.
Mar. t.
30,000
-
.
00,418
3,362
Boatb Boalon Qu U|bl
Compaoy, . . .
U«. ».
J.U. 30.
440.000
22a,»4&
133.140
100.806
303.811
6S.1W
ell. I'roprleton ot the,
Apr. 10,
Apr. S,
11,000
16,000
■lib
E. E.
.
241»
8oullia.idleyF.lliKI«.
July M.
July IT.
7,000
.
10.000
100
SotlthRcadlnBUecbaolc
and AgiicariDnl Id»I
Apr. IT,
Apr. !,
10,000
-
IM,1«
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
191
of Corporations — Continued.
AB8ET8 — Con.
LlABILITUS.
■« 6
i
•a
1
•
s
8
S
1
i
Balance Profit
and Loaa.
a
1
Capital Stock.
Debta.
1
Balance Profit
and Loas.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
•a
$ieo,6i8
-
$4,289
. -
$450,807
$250,000
$168,688
-
$32,169
-
$450,807
460,940
-
-
-
752,344
500,000
108,796
-
143,548
withbal.
P.&L.
1 752,344
4,434
-
-
-
91,027
20,000
67,212
-
3,815
-
01,027
75,980
-
1,884
-
241,401
100,000
87,914
$81,385
22,102
-
241,401
4,005
-
-
$2,095
. 29,450
12,000
17,450
-
-
-
29,450
2,020
$35,348
a 887
-
59,485
60,000
1
8,124
-
-
$1,811
69,435
85,107
-
3,000
40,000
885,738
260,000
86,738
-
-
-
385,788
-
-
-
6,250
7,760
7,000
750
-
-
-
7,750
12,135
-
600
-
26,790
12,600
8,791
-
6,496
4.003
26,790
-
-
-
19,716
28,796
20,000
8.796
-
-
-
28,796
14,596
-
1,330
-
348,126
200,000
136,317
-
12,809
-
848,126
850
-
-
-
11,184
10,000
116
-
1,068
-
11.184
-
-
-
-
29,897
29,000
670
-
227
-
29,897
12,782
-
1,251
-
110,076
28,000
81,936
-
140
-
110,076
-
-
-
22,918
41,392
23,100
18,292 1
-
-
41,892
-
-
-
-
88,300
30,000
1,349 1
1
1.051
-
83,800
-
-
5400
56,877
286,700
286,700
-
-
-
-
286,700
-
-
468
-
64,288
23,850
40,888
-
-
-
64,238
6,230
•
25,000
-
611,086
1
440,000
10,041
-
161,045
-■
611,086
-
-
17,519
15,000
«• **
2,619
-
17,519
140
-
-
10,249 ,
7,000
3,249
-
10,249
-
-
22,900
«
i
221,043
10,000
161,632
32,611
17,000
221,043
a Oi&ee flztarea.
6 Bight shares Roxbury Central Whnrf .
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abatraa of Cebtikicates of Cohditiok
SoDlb Wtrtiiiintb BhM
Sou thworlh Company, .
dpurrell Print, Tlw,
Bpslra llMiafMlurlnf
Compu;, . .
BpeDCcr Gw Compui;,
SpenwrWIraOampun;
BprLngdaU Paper Con
Bprlngfl«ld Uoll Bolle
Bprtniineld Coopenllc
Compsny, Tbe, .
8 pr In (Held B'oniuliy
Company. .
ISM.
J*a. 10,
Uar. IS,
8apt.l»,
37,500
SO.tOO
1
J
tioo
$SM
R.E.
n,is§
j,in
ii,ii!
-
m,7Ji
R.E.
rnfin
«,««
4».m
M.MO
7,»o
«,ia2
R-E.
; d;B.7J*
B...
T.WO
with
R.E.
io,«o
TO,000
R.K.
3,500
,
BT.ioa
1
«..«7|
C3,4M
1894.]
of Corporations — Continned.
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
193
AsuTfl— Con.
LIA2IILITIK8.
Manufaoturea.
Materials and
StoekinProc-
eaa.
Patent Rights.
Miacellancona.
Balance Profit
and LoBB.
•
1
CapiUI Stock.
•
•
•
•
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-
preciatlon.
•
5
-
-
-
$«.W7
$21,927
$15,000
$6,927
-
-
-
$21,927
$5,050
-
-
100
6.625
6,400
225
-
-
-
6,625
-
-
-
9,000
12,000
10,000
2,000
-
-
-
12.000
2.276
-
-
58.855
85,000
50,000
85,000
*"
-
-
85,000
606
-
-
78.227
50,000
18,499
-
$4,728
-
73,227
9,588
$748
$626
42,081
20,000
10.844
$7,725
8.512
-
42,081
35.703
500
-
-
242.966
12,000
88.099
-
142.867
-
242,966
-
-
61.044
-
77,262
40,000
27.000
-
10,262
-
77.262
~
251,000
.
~
678,544
500,000
93.130
-
a65,726
$19,688
678,544
37,685
-
-
-
188.951
40.000
02,198
-
66,753
25.000
183,951
4,650
..
~
9.226
3,870
4,600
300
406
50
9,226
-
-
44.502
55.060
50,000
5.060
-
-
•
55,000
47.584
-
610
-
167.354
75.000
49.989
-
42.415
167,354
7.60B
-
-
7,160
186.540
85.000
6100.540
-
-
-
185,540
-
-
-
-
20.000
29.900
-
-
-
-
29,900
18.100
-
-
-
126.590
75,000
16.380
-
8.750
31,460
126,590
53.654
-
-
-
206,187
100,000
104.315
-
872
-
205,187
2.750
50
-
1,965
16,089
10,000
6.089
-
-
16,089
1.222
-
12.006
„
60,662
23,640
28.858
-
6,730
1.934
60,662
80.010
1.258
-
35.859
20.000
15,859
-
-
-
35,850
1,068
-
-
5.260
24.574
15,000
9,574
-
-
-
24,574
42,483
-
10,217
-
123,817
60,000
62,890
-
427
-
123,317
24.114
10.580
1,864
-
195,458
1 100,000
78,076
-
17,877
-
195.453
a And nneamed rentals.
b Bonds, etc.
194
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Bpringfleld Gas Light
Company, .
Hpringfield Koitting
CompaDy, .
Springfield Luonber
Company, .
Springfield Moantains
Co-operative Cream
ery Association, .
Springfield Printing and
Binding Company,
Springfield Union Pnb
lishing Company,
Springfield Waste Com
pany, .
Suflord Mllla,
Standard Brick Com
pany, The, .
Standard Button Com
pany, .
SUndard Cloth Meter
Oo., • • ■
Standard Clothing Com
pany, The, .
Standard Envelope Com
pany, .
Standard Fertill£er Com
pany, .
Standard Fnmitare
Company, The, .
Standard Horse Shoe
Company, .
Standard Measuring Ma
chine Company, The,
Standard OilCIoth Com
pany.
Standard Publishing
Company, The, .
Standard Rubber Corpo
ration, .
Standard Turning
Works,
Standard Whip Com
pany, .
Assm.
^
•a ^
a e
«♦*
a
"S
OQ
9
a
s
1804. I * I
Jan. 22, , $500,000 i $181,344
1884.
Feb. 7,
Apr. 2,
Mar. 20, Jan. 20, l 20,000
Jan. 31, I 26.000
Apr. 14, I Feb. 10, i 3,000 i 1,800
I I I
Apr. 9, . Apr. 2, 100,000 ,
I I <
I I Ij
Mar. 31, , Feb. 17, | 80,000
May 15,
Nov. 12,
Mar. 9,
Mar. 5,
Sept. 4,
Mar. 7,
Apr. 25,
Oct. 23,
Jan. 27,
150,000
800,000
5,000
Feb. 14, 10,000
June 28, 9,000
Feb. 5,
Jan. 20, Jan. 24,
May 8,
Mar. 16,
May 20,
June 9,
July 28,
600,000
5,100
50,000
Jan. 13, 60,000
Apr. 18, 100,000
Juno 7,
8,000
June 15, , May 14, ' 75,000
Nov. 20, I Oct. 15, 9,000
Aug. 11, Apr. 30, 25,000
Aug. 6, i June 18. ' 30,000
30,085
40,000
26,000
Mar. 14, j Feb. 20. I 50,000 ;l 21,177
24,700
$73,050 $108,204
8,600
100
1,700
4,428
304,600
$427,400
12,188
12,108
1,200
88.430
12,000
with R. B.
with
R. E.
1,600 , c 10,677
a 84,000
5
8
e-s
S
o
$37,618
2,811
34,01S
12,124
36,918
30,960
37,219
660,000
76.048
-
20,476
-
6,166
3,156
1,068
.
880,678
36
140,710
6,640
^
11
25,616
13,470
^5,921
7,216
18,512
22,407
1,000
10,000
2,204
22,431
a And tools.
b Printing office.
c And furniture and fiiturea.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
195
of Corporations — Continued.
ABBBT8— Ck>D.
LlABXl
a t
Balance Profit 3
and Loss. I * 1
1
1 '
Reserve for De- , '
predatlon.
Ai
111
m
s
a
•
0
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Total.
•
g
QQ
3
3
DebU.
Reserves.
•
3
$22,232
-
-
-
$668,489
$500,000
$80,068
o$728
$91,408
6$46,285
$668,489
8,326
-
$12,185
-
35,509
26,000
9,000
-
1,509
-
35,509
26,852
-
2,780
-
85,198
20,000
58,017
-
3,272
•
3,909
1
85,198
-
-
-
8,000
2,800
1,832
-
-
-
4,132
10,766
-
-
-
111,819
100,000
11,319
-
-
-
111,319
929
-
-
$65,019
113,866
80,000
33,866
-
-
113,866
37,860
-
1,248
97,884
209,088
150,000
59,088
-
-
-
209,088
213.747
-
16,694
-
1,210,024
800,000
214,118
-
195,906
-
1,210,024
-
-
-
20,476
c
17,264
-
3,212
-
20,476
12,766
-
-
-
18,932
10,000
7.701
-
33
1,198
18,932
2,195
$1,578
-
1,054
9,040
9,000
40
-
-
-
9,040
966,042
1,190
-
1,347,905
500,000
847,905
-
-
-
1,347,905
-
-
-
31,167
31,203
5,100
26,103
-
-
-
31,203
16,204
"
-
35,881
192,795
50,000
142,795
-
-
-
192,795
-
1
8,625
29,686
119,593
50,000
69,593
-
-
-
119,593
20,126
1
5,000
-
-
155,575
100,000
36,968
-
18,607
-
155,575
-
8,000
-
13
8,024
8,000
24
-
-
-
8,024
12,531
-
-
77,516
57,700
19,816
-
-
77,616
500
1
c2660
« 2,110
s
16,396
9,000
5.451
1,945
-
16,396
41.925
~
-
-
104,021
50,000
52,725
-
1,296
-
104,021
7.973
-
-
-
43,763
; 25,000
1
17,084
-
1,679
-
43.763
16,709
100
717
-
42,161
30,000
3,141
-
993
8,027
42,161
a Snspeose account. 6 For extension.
d Spec, stock (Standard F. Tables) .
c None Issued.
e Furniture, fixtures, etc.
196
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cebtificatbs op Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
s
s
9
a 9
1^
O
S
m
Q
S '
• o
Is
"5. J?
5'
ASfllTt.
Standish Hall Company,
Stanley Electric Mann-
factniing Company,
The, * • . •
Stanley Laboratory Com-
pany, The, .
Staple Heeling Com-
pany, The, .
Staples Coal Company, .
Star Brass Manufactar-
Ing Company,
Star Foandry Company,
Star Mills Corporation, .
Star Worsted Company,
State Safe Deposit Com-
pany, . . . .
State Street Exchange, .
Steel Wire Shank Com-
pany, . . . .
Steimer and Moore Man-
afacturlng Company, .
Stems Paper Company,
The, . . . .
Stevens Linen Works, .
Stevens Manufacturing
Company, .
Stevenson Manufactur-
ing Company,
Stiekney & Poor Spice
OOi, • • • •
Stirling Mills, .
Stockbrldge Iron Com-
pany, • • . .
Stockbrldge Water Com-
pany
Stone & Downer Co., .
Stoneham Odd Fellows'
Hall Association,
Stonemets Printers Ma-
chinery Company,
Stony Brook Water
Power Company,
1894.
July 25
Jan. 5
June 21
May 26
May 28
May 3
Apr. 14
Feb. 12,
June 9
Jan. 12
Mar. 26
May 29
Feb. 23,
Feb. 14
Feb. 12
Oct. 25
Apr. S4
Mar. 3
Jan. 18
Oct. 25
July 16
Jan. 17
Apr. 24
Apr. 24
June 7
1894.
July 12
1893.
Nov. 28
1891.
Feb. 14
Mar. 1
May 15,
Feb. 12
Mar. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 2
Jan. 10,
Feb. 21
May 25
1893.
Deo. 27
1894.
Jan. 18
Jan. 28
Oct. 24
Apr. 18
Feb. 12
Jan. 17
Oct. 28
June SO
Jan. 15
Apr. 3
1898.
/Jan. 21
1894.
Apr. 26
$13,000
200,000
10,000
5,aoo
500,000
61,000
50,000
100,000
50,000
5,000
3,500.000
6,000
25,000
25,000
360,000
250,000
50,000
160,000
100,000
125,000
30,500
20,000
12,000
30,000
30,000
B
1
a «
&
a
•3
$273,926
with
$25,000
15,000 i with
real
R.E.
61,800 I $18,000 38,800
4,125,000
115,926
with
R.B.
50
with
115,000 I 13,200 101,800
R.E.
40,000
with
d 80,000 with
27,185 19,985
« 09,102
with
14,500 7,200
1,000
real
real
7,260
real
7,300
9
a
o
3
OS
$40,212
11,971
estate
26.968
2,802
69,000
25,000
-J
c 4,000
42,366
100,000
30,619
estate
esUte
9,460
estate
19,149
$72,083
5,679
222,d50
35,919
20.169
3,678
a 7,200^
b7llS
22,788
12,828
60.163
98,292
45.935
4,329
41,152
83,271
t4T
22,610
729
a Stocks and bonds.
(/ Mill and machinery.
b Cash.
e And plant.
c And fixtures.
/ SUtement of Jan. 1, 1894.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
197
of Corporations — Continued.
A88ITS— God.
m
h •&«
esSQcoS
SB
S
I
•
0
2 .
s
048
1
8^
1
Balan
and
$101,107
4,187
3.000
92.284
30,800
10.556
108,981
5.000
$15,000 $5,552
16.571
8.784
516,180
85,598
14,158
115,628
1».422
1,798
5.000
106,840
807
636
8,606
127,219
270
o
H
$1,830
5,800
4,331
48,947
982
3,895
89,616
187,051
$26,000
283,964
23,667
8,300
606,600
96,350
52,664
207,816
30,000
7,917
4,147,788
112.038
28,993
TiTABILITIES.
•
1
3
1
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reaerve for De-
preciation.
•
1
$18,000
$12,000
-
-
-
$25,000
118,000
51,473
-
$64,481
^
233,954
10,00()j
a 10,000
63,667
-
-
28,667
-5.300
8.000
-
-
-
8,800
500,000
195,600
-
-
-
095,600
61,000
81,418
-
3,932
-
96,350
50,000
2,664
-
-
52,604
100,000
167,815
-
-
-
267.315
26,000
5,000
-
-
-
80.000
5,000
3,600,000
625,000
$2,200
( c 2,000
dlO,000
« 9,000
717
1,788
-
7,917
4,147,788
5,000
-
^
-
-
5,000
26.000
10,667
•
-
-
-
86,667
26,000
54,938
.
.
79,938
350.000
158,962
-
263,802i
with bal.
P. 8cL.
j 772,764
250.000
210.941
12,811
-
473,762
50.000
43,722
-
"
-
98,722
150,000
24,710
/ 5,966
11,145
$4,969
196,780
100,000
-
147,093
with
reserves
247,693
126,000
99,203
-
-
-
224,203
80,500
31,215
-
7,387
-
09,102
20,000
1
2,610
-
-
22,610
12,000
2,700
-
529
-
15,229
80,000
101,187
-
-
131,187
30,000
-
-
-
-
30,000
a Bills payable.
d Renewal account.
35,687
79,988
772,764
473,752
93,722
196,780
247,698
224,203
69,102
22,610
16.229
131,187
30,000
6 Accounts payable.
« Improvement account.
e Insurance.
/ Guaranty account.
198 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Comditiok
Bulfolk BnwiDg Con
pany, ,
Suffolk Compuy. .
SnniDer Drag and Chen
1»1 Campsuy, Tba,
anderliodWiUrCoi:
Bwm Bolt Compuy,
Swmosu Dye Worka,
Swodlili UarennUle Co-
operitUie Compuy.
■ka Bardeli Akllo Bol.
Swifl Bltar Company,
T.B. Rich Company,
T. F. Llltio OU Coi
T Wbart Flab k
Apr. IB,
Hay !•,
rfMayM.
Feb. 9,
IMS.
D«. 1«,
5"
•4.000 1 tr,!*!
sat.tm
i«,<x»
3.280 i,wi
t,Sll
13.941
«G.TM
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 10.
199
of Corporations — Continued.
A88KT0 — Con.
LlABILITIKS.
Manufactures,
Materials and
Btookin Proc-
ess.
•
S
a
I
0
1
1
SB
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Total.
•
QQ
3
$24,000
3
JO
Q
$502
•
s
Is
•a •»
$2,298
Reserve for De-
1 preciation.
-
-
$18,603
-
$26,800
1
$58,426
-
17,950
-
211,493
200,000
9,503
-
1,990
mm
30,670
$1,761
-
-
46,867
26,000
21,857
-
-
-
56,709
-
-
108,850
100,000
1,741
-
6.609
-
3,066
a 76,000
-
$4,410
333,861
1
174,400
159,461
-
-
-
60,668
-
-
-
313,385
150,000
115,114
-
48,271
-
27,029
-
-
-
47,295
20,000
6 27,295
-
-
-
5,128
-
8,790
-
15,027
12,000
2,606
-
421
-
-
-
72
-
12,633
7,500
225
-■
4,908
-
-
-
-
-
2,200
2,200
-
-
-
-
09,700
-
-
99,700
100,000
-
-
-
-
1
C498
1,670
38,400
38,400
-
-
-
-
60,S13
-
600
-
86,457
10,000
62,181
13,276
1
8,243
1
-
-
-
54,981
20,280
(122.200
8,504
1,729
$2,268
1
1
1
-
5,017
-
6,867
4,600
20
-
2,000
247
1
82,223
-
-
-
870,927
36,000
101,608
-
203,229
. 30,000
4,600
-
s 2,000
479
11,447
6,500
4,947
-
-
-
1,834
«
-
9,094
5,000
1,542
-
2,652
-
6.203 1
-
4,015
-
12,029
6,100
5,212
-
717
-
»i,101
-
-
-
339,804
300,000
21,804
-
18,000
-
-
-
-
-
18,641
13,500
-
-
141
-
1
113.006 ,
-
6,748
-
848.225
300,000
48,226
-
-
o
$26,800
211,493
46,857
108,350
333,861
313,385
47,295
15,027
12,633
2,200
100,000
38,400
85,457
54,981
6,867
370,927
11,447
9,094
12,029
839,804
13,641
848,226
a Franeblae. b And loans. c Tools, etc. d Mortgage. e Fixtures, horses and wngOQu.
200
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Taber Organ Company,
The, . . .
Talbot Mills, .
Tarr and Wonson Lira
Ited,
Taunton Brick Com
pany, .
Taanton Copper Mann
faetnrlng Company,
Taanton Crucible Com
pany, .
Taunton Dye Works and
Bleachery Company,
Taunton Bleotrlo Light
ing Company,
Taunton Gas Light Com
pany, ...
Taunton Locomotive
Manufacturing Com
pany, .
Taunton Oil Cloth Com
pany, .
Taylor and Tapley Man
ufacturlng Company,
Taylor Manufacturing
Company, .
Teoumseh Mills, .
T e e 1 i ng Baking Com
pany, The, .
Telegram Newspaper
Company, The, .
Thayer Woolen Com
pany, .
Thomas Dalby Com
pany, . . .
Thomas W. Emerson
Company, .
Thompson & Odell Co.,
Thompson Hardware
Company, The, .
Thorn Medicine Com
pany. The, .
Thomdike Company,
A88BT8.
•
^u
9
S o
&
*£
e
•O k.
2
a «
a
2"
a
fiQ
1894.
Jan. S2,
Oct. 81,
Apr. 2,
Feb. 12,
June 0,
June 15,
Aug. 10,
June 15,
July 27,
June 11,
June 20,
Deo. 27,
May 3,
Nov. 2,
Feb. 2,
Feb. 6,
June 8,
Jan. 16,
Feb. 27, Jan. 10
1884.
Jan. 10|
Oct. 30,
a Mar. 15
Feb. 10
June 5
May 11
July 12
May 28,
July 16
May 23
June 10
Dec. 10,
Jan. 19
Oct. 23,
Jan. 10
Jan. 3
May 1
Jan. 8
May 8,
July 5,
Aug. 21,
Mar. 6,
Jan. 24
Apr. 2,
July 23
Feb. 13
$15,000
300,000
120,000
30,000
252,000
50,000
21,000
50,000
80,000
218,600
25,000
16,060
15,000
500,000
20,000
16,000
25,000
43,000
25,000
50,000
30,000
5,000
450,000
$178,289
22,000
14,770
35,002
22,520
18,000
26,500
60,000
1,250
162,370
11,000
9,000
^
^
with
R.E.
$6,000
$16,000
with
B.B.
with
R.E.
with
real
2,100
15,900
with
R.E.
-
-
2^0
160,000
4,000
7,000
2,400
6,600
with
R. B.
a
$2,500
85,000
4,000
14,000
65.000
estate
26,466
32,000
53,500
93,956
1,250
12,650
9,506
390,000
8,000
7,300
12,642
.9
$29,122
371,191
33,315
158,122
10,588
5,372
4,402
24,131
23,562
68.6"^
30,650
6,972
7,100
11,15c!
5,290
10,012
ft,M9
12,719
4,500 22,777
I
- , 12.539
145.312 176,«i^>*^
a Adjourned.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
201
of Gorporationt — Continued.
AflBBTS — Coo.
» —
' Manufactures,
Materials and
Block In Proc
ess.
•
1
•
%
a
m
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
$d3»275
.
a.
$M,897
218,430
-
-
-
852,866
76^66
a$17,000
$6,100
-
158,981
24,270
-
-
-
59,918
166,380
-
-
-
424,404
25.084
$12,155
70,347
6,549
-
-
4,613
43,000
-
-
25,172
-
79,674
7,796
-
-
-
111,920
91,910
^
^
992
270,420
13,511
-
-
-
84,699
-
-
3,000
-
46,300
6,308
-
884
23,280
93,606
1
-
e 6,500
-
659,675
6,000
-
-
-
36,152
2,960
-
460
-
16,000
105,978
-
924
-
116,914
26,911
-
« ^
-
54,102
31,687
-
4,368
-
48,804
48,079
2,235
"
77.591
36.468
-
-
-
49,007
4,349
-
-
5,043
10,286
113,661
-
-
-
570,769
Liabilities.
$16,000
300,000
120,000
80,000
252,000
50,000
21.000
50,000
• 80,000
218,500
25,000
16,000
15,000
500,000
20,000
16,000
25,000
43,000
25,000
50,000
30,000
5,000
450,000
$36,278
228,237
26,861
122,391
20,347
^,000
29,574
5,661
51,920
6,500
80,300
8,260
60,509
15,800
89,114
9,561
15,223
27,591
17,865
5,286
3,005
6 $15,981
8,581
to
p
4)
o o
o
*-i:
«lj
o OS
Balanc
and
Reserv
preci
•
3
$3,000
100,000
18,000
3,057
30,013
26,268
47,305
$11,619
224,629
5,000
2,800
1,541
11,324
20,000
5,804
30,083 68,993
352
1,142
dl06,440
$64,807
852,866
158,981
59,918
424,404
70,347
43,000
79,574
111,929
270,420
84,699
46,300
28,260
659,675
36,152
16,000
116,914
64,102
48,804
77,591
49,007
10,286
570,709
a Trade marks.
c Sixty-five shares Manufacturers* Gas Light Co.
b Burplas.
d Guaranty and renovation.
202
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abntract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
>
s
•
s
9
o^
*«
e 9
o
1
o o
o
A8BKT8.
Tbomdlke Manufactur-
ing Coropany,
Tborp and Martin Co., .
Thorp and Martin Man-
ufacturing Company, .
Tileston and HolUngs-
wortb Company,
Torrey and Bentley Com-
pany, The, .
Towle Manufacturing
Company, .
Towne Fuller Company,
The
Traders* Co-operaUve
Union, . . . .
Traveller Publishing
Company, .
Travis Bros. Shoe Co., .
Treat Hardware and
Supply Company,
Tremont and Suffolk
Mills, . . . .
Tribune Building Com-
pany, . . . .
Troy Cotton and Woolen
Manufactory,
Troy Granite Company,
Tubular Rivet and Stud
Company, .
Tucker and Cook Manu-
facturing Company, .
Tudor Company, .
Turner and Kimball Cab-
inet Company, .
Turner's Falls Company,
Turner's Falls Cotton
Mills, . . . .
Turner's Falls Driving
Association,
Tumor's Falls Lumber
Company, . ,
1804.
Dec. 17,
May 22,
Mar. 24,
Feb. 24,
Aug. 7,
June 7,
Jan. 26,
1894.
Sept. 17
May 14
Apr. 19
Jan. 29
July 8
May 4
Jan. B
Oct. 10, 6 July 10
Deo. 3,
July 11,
June 8,
Feb. 19,
June 4,
Feb. 10,
Aug. 11,
Feb. 23,
Mar. 29,
Feb. 19,
July 3,
Apr. 10
June 8
b Feb. 14
Feb. 6
Jan. 8
Feb. 6
Mar. 28
Jan. 28
Jan. 23
Feb. 14
May 28
May 25, & May 23
May 5,
Feb. 1,
May 26,
Apr. 19
1898.
Dec. 12
1894.
May 24
$100,000
45,000
50,000
500,000
75,000
372,000
40,000
2,910
100,000
7,000
60,000
1,500,000
24,000
300,000
8,000
200,000
60,000
168,500
22,000
300,000
80,000
6,000
85,000
1
1
s|
fl
1
•
«
a
i
•8
Cash aod Debts
Receivable.
$30,000
$7,500
$22,500
$32,000
$28,027
-
-
-
-
26,940
-
-
-
_ j
a 5.625^
83,387^
277,313
with
R.B.
274,326
94,101
-
-
-
22,645
62,869
2,500
60,369
135,000
1S0,711
-
-
-
5,000
30,295
-
-
-
-
1,315
c 5,200
-
-
27,000
17,086
«*
•
-
4,885
1,095
-
-
-
-
24,865
551,000
-
-
649,000
1,220,447
52,000
with
R.B.
-
1,434
290,008
with
R.B.
312,678
36,237
«•
4,150
-
3,400
3,900
55,000
4,000
51,000
86,000
8a,184
20,700
with
R.B.
27,182
9,3:»
175,500
with
R.B.
1,000
3.2S8
-
-
5,248
5,142
280,725
264,725
25,000
-
94,082
41,153
with
R.B.
53,916
8,3^6
6,166
d 5,222
044
115
23i»
-
55,064
-
10,000
i
33,376
a Notes.
b Adjourned.
c And stock.
d And improvements.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
203
of CorporaJtionB — Continued.
•Si
CSSOD •
$24,664
77.966
70,917
196,796
8.959
287,073
20,078
1,827
6,992
37,800
664,372
123,300
1,100
99,666
26,860
347
22,269
26,789
56,716
AB8BT8 — Cod.
•
t
•
m
0
Profit
*•
s
8-^
a
i
P
£
a
3
O
H
-1
-!
$3,000
a 8,241
( 8,200
1,460
d 57,042
08,326
14,996
126
/400
g 6,070
M64,983
63,766
m 1,000
-1
$68,679
1,109
I 26,604
6,784
I
LlABILITnCS.
M
QQ
3
8-
3
4)
4,412
0 44,900
1,260
8,660
38,3n
744
$117,601
108,146
171,708
844.076
91,972
630,648
66,499
4,361
246,933
18,706
67,421
3,003,819
63,434
772,213
21,100
262,840
122,423
180,136
37,810
323,807
176,394
6,616 I
156,066
$100,000
46,000
60,000
600,000
75,000
372,000
40,000
2,910
93,100
7,000
t
60,000
1,600.000
24,000
300,000
8,000
200,000
60,000
163,600
22,000
300,000
80,000
6,600
86,000
$16,316
47,781
c 93,403
28,305
109,636
7,180
•172,542
16,000
1,441
i 60.000
j 33,000
k 46,281
1 13,652
11,706
4,316
764,662
28,679
6,609
13,100
12,207
62,428
16,810
66,000
800
66,013
0*2
SI
•3 «
5
o
Eh
$l,876j
16,365
234
,440J
9,792
86,106
3,106
146,267
855
466,604
50,633
n 2,376
3,807
31.394
116
6,042
withbal.
P.&L.
($117,691
•
108,146
-
171,708
withbal
P.&L.
844,076
-
91,972
-
630,648
$499
65,499
-
4,351
-
245,983
-
18,706
-
67.421
683,000
3,093,819
-
63,434
-
772,218
-
21,100
^ -
262,840
-
122,423
14,259
180,136
-
37,810
20,000
323,807
-
176,394
6,516
-
166,055
a Pnmltare, fiztarM, etc. b Plxtares. c Notes. d Plant, trade-mArks, etc.
e Fiztaree and nneamed insaranee, etc. / Teams and fixtures. g Furniture and fixtures.
h Printing office. Associated Press f raoehise, subscription liat and goodwill. < First mortgage bonds.
J 8«oond mortgage bonds. k Loans from various sources. / Accounts payable.
rM Ten shares its own Stock. n Income. o Construction.
204
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates of Condition
NAME OF corpo-
ration.
2
««
o
ee
p
s
o
Turner's Falls Paper
Company, .
Tamer's Falls, Shoe
Company, .
Tazedo Mannfactorlng
Company, .
Tyer Rnbber Company,
Underhay Oil Co., .
Union Belt Company, .
Union Building Associa-
tion, . . . .
Union Building Associa-
tion (2d return), .
Union Button Sewing
Machine Company, .
Union Company, .
Union Cotton Ginning
Company, .
Union Cotton Manufact-
uring Company, .
Union Cvcle Manufact-
uring Company, .
Union Electric Light
Company, .
Union Furniture Com-
pany, . . . .
Union Olass Company, .
Union Glue Company,
The
Union Eall Association,
The, . . . .
Union Ice Company,
Union Water Meter
Company, .
Union Wharf Company,
United Electric Light
Company, .
United States Compound
Oxygen Company,
The, . . . .
United States Cord Com-
pany, . . . .
1894.
May 31
Feb. 15
July 19
Jan. 29
Mar. 28
Feb. 16
Jan. 1
Dec. 28
Oct. 26
Dec. 31
Aag. 29
Nov. 17
Jan. 29
Sept. 15
Mar. 19
Apr. 9
June 30
Deo. 10
July 26
Feb. 2
June 19
Sept. 7
Feb. 10
Aug. 7
1894.
May 23,
Jan. 15,
Jan. 12,
Jan. 22,
Feb. 6,
Jan. 18,
1883.
Dee. 4,
1894.
Dec. 3,
Oct. 16,
Nov. 24,
May 7,
Oct. 24,
1393.
Oct. 16,
1894.
July 10,
Jan. 17,
Feb. 14,
May 1,
Oct. 1,
June 8,
Jan. 27, |
i
cMay 7, i
July 25,
Jan. 1,
1R84. j
« July 26, I
Abbkts.
Capital Stock as
by the Corpora
Real Bstate.
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
&
a
2
p
n
•
•
a
1
•
51
$1^,000
$86,846
$52,346
$34,500
$28,IW
1
! $44,977
60.000
-
-
«
4
25,000
-
-
4,000
3.4<U
1
60,000
26,000
-
-
15,700
27,S98
60,000
-
-
-
-
53,S6i<
48,000
-
-
-
13,999
28JHT2
1
11,000
-
-
8,000
-
11,000
11,000
3,000
8,000
-
-
25,000
-
-
-
-
10,13*;
5,840
10,255
-
-
-
5.52:i
5,000
-
-
9S3
750,000
-
(
al64,743;
290,152
401,603
28,270
30,000
-
-
-
31.441
7jr2
20,000
10,182
2,834
67,348
13,768
2.'»1
20,000
5,550
1,000
4,550
2,381
1,491
50,000
17,000
with
R.B.
500
13,5* "O
6,000
-
-
650
2,035
5.514
150,000
124,764
with
R.B.
«ft
5,774
75,000
1
74,000
19,640
64,860
-
2,8.,6
75,000 '
1
45,000
with
R.E.
86.000
14,810
300,000 '
300,000
-
-
-
a.ooi
500,000
104,454
19,430
85,024
361.660 J
21.440 i
cI123,6^t6 S
10,000
-
-
•
8,802
1^389
40,000
1
-
-
-
38,503
S,9U1
a Addition to No. 2 mill.
d Stoclc in Indian Orchard County.
b And engines, boilers, etc.
e Statement of Jan. 1, 1894.
c AdJonnK»d.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
205
of CorporatiotiB — Continaed.
AB8ST8 — Goo.
LlABILITIEB.
0
11-
llli
■
1
•
•
i
1
Balance Profit
•od Loaa.
•
M
1
CD
1
1
1
•
t
1
Balanoe Profit
and Loan.
Beaerre for De-
predation.
•
1
•1T.«5
-
-
-
$in,246
$120,000
$5,000
-
$18,846
$88,400
$177,240
-
-
-
$62,790
52,800
48,900
8,900
-
-
-
52,800
10,000
-
$8,000
-
25,404
25,000
450
-
44
-
25,404
82,818
-
-
-
151,911
50,000
60,869
-
82,052
-
151,911
9,528
-
-
-
63,088
50,000
11,577
-
1,511
-
63,088
40,008
-
-
-
82,604
48,000
20.958
-
18.700
-
82,664
-
-
-
-
8,000
11,000
1,600
-
-
12,500
-
-
-
-
11,000
11,000
1,200
-
-
-
12,200
1,M0
$5,000
500
7,704
25,000
25,000
-
-
-
-
25,000
7,728
-
a 2,565
-
20,073
5,840
1.258
-
-
18,980
26,078
-
5,000
710
-
0,699
5,000
600
-
983
116
0.699
40,705
-
-
-
984.568
750,000
184,668
-
-
-
984.568
40,0n
-
-
-
78,677
80,000
22.718
-
-
25,964
78,677
51,018
-!
e 00,082
<I91
160
I 105
55«402
20,000
85,402
-
-
-
55.401
12,009
-
1,688
« 1,500
1 -
24,614
20,000
4,896
-
218
-
24.614
28,008
-
-
12,499
66,507
60,000
16.697
-
-
-
66,597
7,851
-
210
-
15,760
6,000
4,487
-
5,828
-
15,760
-
-
-
-
180,588
68,500
66,000
-
7.088
-
180,588
0^400
-
14,450
-
07,686
76,000
-
-
10,686
12,000
97,680
48,044
1.000
i/5,000
i 1.100
-
146,050
75,000
50,992
-
20,058
-
146,050
-
-
-
-
808,061
800,000
-
-
8,061
-
803,061
0,288
_
c 127,080
2,027
-
750,111
500,000
168,857
-
11,254
75,000
760,111
1,807
-
-
5,290
10,004
10,000
0,804
-
-
-
16,004
U,180
80,000
^5,600
08,571
154,764
40,000
114,764
-
-
-
154,704
a Peraooal property.
d OfHee f oraitara.
g Stock in traMniy.
b Soppliea.
e Engine and boiler.
e Linea.
/ Putema and drawinga.
206
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates op Condition
NAME OF corpo-
ration.
United States Envelope
Machine Company, .
United States Spring Bed
Company, The, .
United States Tabular
Bell Company, The, .
United States Watch
Company, .
Upton FeltlOf Mills, The,
Upton Manufactaring
Company, .
Ux bridge and North-
bridge filectric Com-
pany, The, .
Uzbridge Cotton Mills, .
V. W. Crowson Waste
oo*, • • . *
Valley Paper Company,
Victor Mannfacturing
Company, .
Villa Paint and Orna-
mental Company, The,
Vineyard Grove Com-
pany (for 1803), .
Vineyard Grove Com-
pany, • . . .
Vineyard Haven Marine
Railway Company,
The
Vineyard Haven Water
Company, .
Vineyard Haven Wharf
Company, .
Voprhees Electric Com-
pany, . . . •
Vose and Cutler Manu-
facturing Company, .
W. C. Packard Furni-
ture and Carpet Com-
pany, . . . .
W. C. Young Manufact-
niing Company, .
W. E. Howe Company, .
W. F. Adams Company,
1894.
May 9,
Jan. 10,
Apr. 12,
Aug. 16,
Mar. 9
Nov. 30,
Aug. 14
Aug. 25
Feb. 27
Feb. 2
May 15
Apr. 27
May 22,
Nov. 22
Feb. 26,
June 26
May 16
Sept. 7
Feb. 20,
Mar. 9,
Sept. 10
July 19
Mar. 8
1894.
May 8,
Jan. 8,
1893.
Dec. 6,
1894.
June 9,
Jan. 10,
Nov. 1,
July 18,
May 8,
a Jan. 17,
Jan. 27,
Jan. 15,
Jan. 6,
1893.
Oct. 11,
1894.
Nov. 8,
a Feb. 12,
Mar. 26,
Apr. 2,
dAug. 7,
Jan. 13,
Feb. IS,
May 6,
Mar. 6,
1893.
Nov. 20,
h2
Abbstb.
as •*
«
Capital Stock as
by the Corpora
Real Estate.
Land and Wa-
ter Power.
•
Buildings.
Machinery.
!
$20,000
-
-
-
$2,600
5,000
-
-
-
1.2S6
40,000
-
-
-
2,882
100,000
$19,100
$10,000
$9,100
80,000
15,000
-
-
10.904
11,164
1
12,000
7,960
4,800
3,660
8,600
40,000
-
-
6,719
20,196
126,000
44,626
12,726
81.800
60,000
16,000
-
-
-
4.124
200,000
190,000
with
R.E.
00,000
6,000
8,600
with
R.E.
1,974
10,000
-
10,000
-
1.600
16,000
30,360
26,000
6,360
h
16,000
40,460
(66,000
\ 26,200
10,260
-
8,200
-
-
-
1,600
60,000
72.910
with
real
estate.
1,760
-
-
cl,760
•»
6,000
-
-
-
-
6,000
-
-
-
1,600
30,000
-
-
-
-
86.000
-
-
-
12,000
10,000
-
-
-
-
14,000
-
-
-
-
5
$924
6,286
4,685
12,806
2,006
i.n4
2,960
81,721
3,878
34
814
1,200
16,000
0,287
5,490
a Adjourned.
b Wharves.
e And whail.
d Special.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
of Corporations — Continued.
Aiiit* — Cod.
1,
1
»T,s-e
•8.001)
•30,000
»Mia
ia.7M
s.ts<
14,10*
»,TM
4i,o«a
I1S,ltt
S»,000
f™,ooo
»3»,0SB
U.1M
M,«n
IfiM
2.000
MO
41,MS
lO.OM
70.M4
U.KS
189,718
It,H4
VIS
80,001
IBI.TOa
<T8.*S*
s^
"
108
12,8H
MO
0,000
17.000
».n8
82,006
42.M&
;
M
S,M1
8.816
18.288
1,T«0
^ooD
'
-
8.111
MO
800
-
a,«i
«,4«
»*^
-
-
81,628
13,000
B,000
asa
38,518
10.«M
..«.
d2,M»
10,«8
I,«10
8.600
14,600
md slMtro pliM.
16,868
17,128
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cbritpicatis of CoMDmox
OMip.Br. -. . .
M.y s,
Ju>. 11.
000
«4),Ma
•ie,soo
»30,000
u,toa
llt,8Sl
w.M.OoibrO«iip.iir.
Jnne IB,
Apr. a.
8,000
-
-
tJXI
W. 8. R«il Tor Com-
pur
JnMlS,
ajD» I,
a,ooo
(MlO
1S,T00
40,tI0
s,o«
t»;m
WMhOMtt Ullk OOD-
P"!
MW !•.
dT,.
M,IW)
4,000
1,000
^ooo
^ooo
tjm
WMbaMt Shirt Cum.
pmy, ....
0«. 11,
im.
Aag. 10.
100,000
SS,TM
with
E.B.
M.8TO
tt,Ml
Wild* ud EtMd Com.
P"r
8.pt.ll.
Job. *,
100.000
10.000
K.m
Wwbworth Howlud ft
JnlT «.
ktar. t,
200
000
S0,«33
4,000
3t,m
» 40,737
.s,.m
Willi vrl(ht ICiuatiiiit-
nrisg Com puy of Mm-
JiUy H.
aUmyll.
M
000
1,«00
16,B»
W.]t.F.1tl>(Coi»p>nr,
M.r. 0,
J«i. M.
SO
ooo
S.000
soo
(,S00
KfiW
Wll
W>k*aeld RUUn Oom-
P"?
Ibr. J.
Fab. 11,
1,000
000
MS,000
146,000
3SO,000
W.000
ti),D<a
Wakafleld RmL K>Ut>
ud BalldlDi AHOote-
Uon
F.b. IS,
Jmi. U,
100
ooo
M,no
oltb
B.E.
II,70«
Wkkeflald Witor Oom-
P«W
Jaly U,
May 81.
160
000
80,701
Wllh
rad
«UM
nVM
Walker ind Pnlt Uu.
Ju. ta,
Jan. 11,
3M
000
10»,470
«Uh
R-B.
10,000
IM,tSI
Walker SUUoo e>wr«r
Comply. . . .
J«i. IS,
Jao. IS,
300
000
l]«,00t
Walpols XmarT HULi, .
Oot. 1.
JqlJ 11.
as
wo
»,«8
Wllh
R.B.
13,0(7
»i,m
WmlterM. Loitney Com-
P"7.Th
ia. IB.
Jim. S,
2S0
000
_
41,7Si
»,T00
W>ltlumEin«]'Wb«d
O01»p«iy, . . .
HV 10.
Fob. r.
00
000
».*«
.rtlh
E.B.
C 10.40*
is.sn
WHtUm Gu Light
Compuy. . . .
Hu. 6,
FA. M,
140^000
BS.MS
4.S0O
M.OM
»S,11S
Il.ttN
WilUum UnHo Hall
Oomp«.y, . . .
Dm. e.
eapl. ».
80,000
10.000
wltk
E.B.
-
ij»
a ii)aaraai.
SAm
aito
raa.
e Am
tooIa«>
flx».«.
1894.]
of Corporationa — Continaed.
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
209
AasBTB^Oon.
•
LlABILinSB.
ill
III
1A
•
s
1
•
•
0
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
1
1
1
1
3
Balance Profit
and LoM.
Reaerve for De-
predation.
§
t«,928
-
•4.660
$6,000
$25,264
$20,000
$6,264
-
-
-
$25,264
82,402
-
4,747
-
107,628
65.000
42.078
-
$450
-
107,528
33.027
-
-
-
06,481
60.000
14,618
-
21,868
-
06,481
6,701
-
a 1,348
-
14,001
10.000
8,404
507
-
14,001
43,206
-
-
-
340,547
200,000
140.547
-
-
-
840.547
»,688
-
-
-
12,020
5,000
6,788
-
237
-
12,020
28,734
$4,500
20,350
-
165,247
25,000
85,482
-
44.765
$60,000
165.247
500
-
0,400
28,080
45,808
80.000
15.803
-
-
-
45,308
146,460
-
1,150
-
880,600
100.000
107,682
-
80,418
2.500
880,600
104.000
-
-
-
222,757
100,000
04,756
-
10,110
8,802
222,757
lT2,7n
-
-
-
876,825
200.000
160.045'
-
7,280
-
876,825
3.400
60,088
28,218
-
104,784
50,000
48.246
.
6,488
-
104,784
4,600
-
-
15,021
88,882
20,000
18,882
-
-
-
88,882
Ml,176
-
250.100
-
1,420,844
1,000,000
44.006
-
884,480
-
1,420,844
-
-
2,100
-
110,172
100,000
4.500
•
-
8,048
6.620
110,172
with
C.and
D.R.
-
067.060
120,000
6838.050
-
-
-
067,050
117,380
-
10.000
-
448,216
300,000
71,016
-
72,200
-
448,216
180,660
-
8,121
-
408,786
200.000
208.862
-
424
-
408,786
26,611
-
3,311
8,222
107,582
25,000
82,532
-
-
-
107,532
28,741
75,581
cl20,000
-
800.780
250,000
86,406
-
14,874
-
800,780
86,500
-
2,778
-
00.008
60.000
80,873
-
-
8,185
00,006
0,000
-
2.527
-
810,006
140,000
81,500
-
08,406
-
810.006
-
-
•
24,510
65,800
80,000
85,800
-
-
-
65.800
•
a Hones, hameeaee and wagona. b Bonds and notes. e aood-will, World's Oolnmblan Bzposition.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cektificateb of Comihtioh
Wahhim Trlbuoa Coi
WmlOwiD Walsh Tool
W*nip*DBtg Mull,
WiuDialU Hotel C(
Compuf, ■
WsDOOnoc Pan
Wars Xleotrlo Con
WusLumberCoinpsn)',
Ware Pr»tt Coa)|»Dr,
urlDg Compiny, Ttat
WiihBon in Poliery Com ■
JulJ »,
Apr. It.
iM.y B.
May M,
Apr. 2fc
Us7 n, Apr. 24,
400,000
ID.OOO
|in,tio
■llh
M,000
with
ais.its
t«.ioa
30.000
«lt)l
308.B73
with
T^aoo
3.m
».M«
11,380
I.«»
Law
H.000
S,000
6,000
4,600
0,000
1.000
sM,ooo
irllh
8,800
400
^
1^
•I.T0O
•«,KI
10,680
um
11,088
11,M1
Ufa
0.18S
E.
100, IM
4to,!;j
K.
6,000
1,1U
,010
«»I,7«
l,8T0,Mt
i,wo
a. E. 200.000
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
811
of Corporations — Continned.
Asscn— Con.
T.TABIL
IT1X8.
1.
OQ
, Patent RIghta.
■
8
1
3
atl2,063
Balance Profit
and LoBB.
•
•
1
GQ
"3
«^
«
•
•
•
Reaerve for De-
preciation.
•
-3
-
$151
$20,440
$14,000
$6,440
-
-
-
$20,440
$11,634
$5,000
773
-
41,626
25,000
15,198
-
$1,428
-
41,626
11,294
6,063
814
2,877
43,022
26,000
18,022
-
-
-
48.022
9S,411
-
4,700
-
64,432
30,000
18,952
-
4.980
$6,600
64.482
-
-
-
16,000
21,188
16.000
6 6,188
-
-
21.188
a04,6dO
-
106,486
1,266,784
400,000
74,688
792.096
-
1,266,784
-
-
-
-
21,114
16,000
1,214
-
1,900
2.000
21,114
141,426
-
6,766
-
1,178,485
760,000
278,077
-
165,408
-
1.178.486
-
-
cl,600
-
84,860
16.000
-
-
18.860
-
34,860
909^14
-
-
-
4.278,758
3,000,000
l/)66,608
(290,000
_
181.734
611
4.278.758
MO
-
e 66,270
-
70,786
30.000
28,742
-
11.993
-
70,736
-
-
118
-
16,027 1
16.000
27
-
-
-
16.027
-
-
-
-
8,000
1,300
-
-
1
1.800
1«484
-
/ 20,109
887
_^
43,714
25.100
16,100
-
1,908
606
43.714
12,820
-
1,022
-
41,235
16,000
24,040
mm
1.205
-
41,235
103,612
-
-
-
181,224
100,000
11,469
-
6,191
13.664
181,224
-
-
-
269
6,269
6,000
259
-
-
-
6,269
10,987
-
1,029
-
46,882
10,000
12,682
-
19,150
4,000
46,832
109,1SO
-
-
-
828,161
125,000
182.599
-
20,652
-
828,161
821,908
-
■
-
846,980 1
450.000
293.874
-
-
^103.116
846,989
89,787
-
601
-
82,302
1
60,000
24.706
-
1,458
6,229
82,392
6,847
-
-
74
1
18,400
6,100
1
7.300
-
-
-
18,400
12,610
•
-
1,645
-
30,818 1
1
18,000
1
4,837
A $16,888
93
-
39,818
a Plant, tjpe, eto.
a Plant.
b Mortgage. c Furniture and post office fizturea.
/ Llnea, metera, lampai etc. g And guaranty.
d Dividend.
h Snrplna.
212
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cbrtifioates op Coin>moH
NAKB OF CORPO-
RATION.
a
^
s
•
8
s
s
ii
o
l«
1
Washburn and Moon
Manafaoturlng Com-
pany, ....
Waflhington Mill* Com-
panyi ....
WaahinfftonMiUflBmary
Manafacturing Oom-
paDy^ «...
Waaon Manafaeinring
Company, .
Watehman PnbUahlng
Company* The, .
WaUrhouM Shannon &
M n n r o a (Incorpo-
Fafcad), . . . •
Watertown Machina
Company, .
Watertown Water Sap-
ply Company,
Waoregan Paper Com-
pany, • ■ . •
Waver ley Hall Com-
pany, • . • •
Weeden Manafaoturlng
Corporation,
Weeka & Potter Com-
pany, ....
Weeka & Potter Com-
pany (2d retnm),
Weetamoe MUle, .
Welns Manufaotarlng
Company, The, .
Wekepeke Woolen Com-
pany, ....
Welleeley Co-operative
Creamery Asaodatlon,
Weat Boylatoa Mann-
factarlng Company,
The, . . . .
Weet Chop Steamboat
Company, .
West Dudley Co-opera-
tive Creamery Associ-
ation, . . . .
West Ware Paper Com-
pany, The, .
July 8,
Mar. 7,
June 14,
Aug. 24,
Apr. 0,
June 12,
Apr. 18,
Aug. 6,
May 18,
Dee. 1,
Feb. 24,
Jan. 12,
Dec. 31,
Jan. 26,
Apr. 10,
Mar. 6,
June 21,
Apr. 0,
July 28,
June 18,
Oct. 26,
1804.
May 29
Feb. 6
May 7
Aug. 20,
Jan. 17
a May 19
Jan. 18
Jan. 17
May 12,
Oct. 8
Feb. 20
1808.
Dec. 6
1804.
Dec. 4
Jan. 24,
Feb. 6
Feb. 6
Mar. 8
Feb. 10
June 20
Apr. 7|
Oct. 0
$
8,600,000
2,600,000
40,000
800,000
72,000
26,000
16,000
160,000
100,000
6,000
12,000
200,000
200,000
660,000
10,000
ia,ooo
8,000
800,000
8,000
2,000
80,000
Abbsts.
5
«
I
i
^u-
n
•
a
s
'O k
•a
JO
r
&
1
•5^
$742,089
19^430
10,000
88,600
176,000
172,886
18,286
1,000
166,626
2,160
86,000
$
1,600,000
-
184,400
$008,209
10,000
-
with
B.B.
4,000
6,000
21,000
17,600
with
i«al
6,864
:
with
B.B.
200
800
22,000
183,626
160
2,000
6,000
20,000
$
2,084,000
1,687,218
1,400
80,000
7.000
17.000
» 7.000
c 14,600
estate
(11,062
4,000
6,000
6,000
880,000
8,600
11.
400
268,749
$1,660,880
780,048
37,877
1,946
22,964
8,000
88,877
•46
2,iao
21,660
10
11.830
81,897
104,014
4,047
8,«B6
i,sa»
zn
38,606
1,0»
148
a Adjourned.
6 Stand pipe.
c Filter gallery.
d Bquipment.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
213
of Corporationa — Continued.
Ambts— Oon.
ill
SSao S
•
!
•
•
1
a
1
1
Balance Profit
and LoM.
•
I
$
1,909.138
•
-
•
7.173,463
1,688,975
-
$27,768
-
4,738,573
19,289
-
-
-
58,516
101.037
"
»200,000
e 60,000
-
716,690
-
-
-
$66,923
74,923
9.896
-
d748
-
49,021
-
•1,260
-
810
20,006
-
-
0 222,834
16,686
318,000
41,221
-
-
-
287,880
-
-
-
^628
7,654
3,2S8
-
-
-
18,688
156,683
-
9,695
-
253,985
164,408
-
, 10.368
-
284,790
82,098
-
-
153,790
742,770
12,310
-
-
-
19,505
1,153
-
-
-
32.797
30
-
18
811
2,632
244,449
-
-
-
697,828
-
-
-
10,480
11,500
260
-
J2B
-
3,823
5,806
-
-
1
80.772
Ltabilitibb.
M
«*
O
*a
m
^^
1
m
o.
^
w
«
o
Q
Profit
M.
orDe-
on.
8'3
•1
o
^T>
q-rs
ss
IS
cq
tf
$
3,600,000
2,500,000
40,000
300,OOOJ
72,000
25,000
15,000
150,000
ioo,ooo|
5,000
12,000
200,000
200,000
560,000
10,000
16,000
1,800
300,000
8,000
2,000
30,000
$
2,500,463
1,537,936
7,050
191,600
6200,000
2,923
24,021
5,006
168,000
/lOO.OOO
20,230
100
6,455
53,075
84,790
192,770
5,076
11,589
832
245,016
3,600
1,646
45,553
a $3,407
$
1,178,000
692,141
4,966
A 689
17,660
1,765
nss
10
4,429
6,258
148,942
42
5,219
5
o
$6,500
25,000
3,370
135
$
7,173,463
4,733,573
68,516
716.600
74,923
49,021
20,006
318,000
237,880
7,554
18,588
253,985
284,790
742,770
19,505
32,797
2,632
607,328
11,500
3,823
80,772
a Aecruod Intereat.
d Fnmltare, etc.
g Expeaae.
b Springfield Steam Power Co. bonda. c Springfield Steam Power Co. atock.
€ Plpea, gates, bydranta, eaaements, etc. / Savings bank loan.
h Income. i Suspense account. Jf Gold medals.
214
ANNUAL RETURNS OP CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Cebtificates of Condition
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
•
«
>
2
9
a
a
o
«a
o
^ai
^
i
1
a
West Warren Co-opera-
tive AiaodatioD, .
Weatboro* Factory Aa-
•odatloD, The, .
Wettborongh Gaa and
Electric Company,
The, . . • .
Westfleld Cigar Com-
pany, . . • •
Westfleld Gas Light
Company, .
Westfleld Heating and
Plumbing Company, .
Westfleld Power Com-
pany, . . • .
Westfleld Whip Com-
pany
Weston lUnmlnating
Company, .
Westport Point Hotel
Company of Massa-
chnsetts, The,
Woymoath and Bralntree
Publishing Company,
Weymouth Light and
Power Company,
Weymouth Seam-face
Granite Company,
Weymouth Shoe Supply
Company, The, .
Wheeler Express Com-
pany, . . • .
Wheeler Reflector Com-
pany, ....
Wheelman Company,
The, ....
Wheelock Engine Com-
pany, The, .
Whltcomb Envelope
Company, The, .
White and Bagley Com-
pany, The, .
White Oak River Cor-
poration,
1894.
Feb. 6,
Apr. 30,
Sept. 24,
Feb. 6,
Mar. 9,
June 12,
Jan. 29,
Apr. 17,
Feb. 15,
Feb. 24,
Nov. 6,
Oct. 13,
Feb. 10,
June 28,
July 14,
June 27,
Apr. 9,
Apr. 10,
Mar. 26,
1894.
Jan. 17,
Apr. 4,
a Bept.22,
Jan. 1,
Feb. 12,
a Apr. 3,
Jan. 10,
1893.
a Dec. 28,
1892.
6 Jan. 20,
1803.
Sept. SO,
1894.
Oct. 16,
July 2,
1893.
Dee. 6,
1894.
June 19,
May 7,
Jan. 17,
a Mar. 19,
Apr. 3,
Feb. 7,
Apr. 16, o Mar. 28,
Nov. 26,
a Nov. 22,
%^
op
o
$4,426
13,300
26,000
10,000
76,000
6,000
41,000
10,000
160,000
10,000
8,600
0 76,000
16,000
6,000
8,000
66,000
26,000
46,000
160,000
3,600
70,000
Abssts.
i
•
C9
^s
•
•
&
a
•
•Oh
•o
U3
1
3^
"5
$18,000
34.007
63,817
16,440
18,164
31,923
76,000
28,237
$3,000
6,872
with
1.200
with
13,600
18,608
20,000
600
$1,660
16,000
28,136
R.B.
16,240
-1
K. Jit*
$3,000
18,316
66,000
6,612
/27,737
c 8,680
d 3,720
129,697
16,7.S6
22,909
30,000
472
11,787
as
IS
$2,402
10
600
26,800
70,286
7,668
-
2,087
9,499
1,261
1.720
32,096
3.880
29,139
761
13,096
12,721
46,760
66.eS5
6,966
8,991
a Adjourned. b Statement of Jan. 1, 1804.
d And tools and fixtures. e Under investigation.
e Type, rales and cota.
/ On leased land.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
215
of Corporations — Continned.
ASBBTS — Oon.
Liabilities.
r
Reserve for De-
predation.
Manufactures,
Materials and
Stock la Proc-
ess.
•
S
a
1
•
•
9
8
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
3
Capital Stock.
•
•
I
Balance Profit
and Loss.
1
•
o
•3,»4
•
$58
-
$8,072
$4,426
$2,383
-
$688
$596
$8,072
-
-
-
$4,400
25,410
13,300
12,110
-
-
25,410
4,2fi2
-
-
81,842
a
10,000
21,461
—
181
.
31,842
2,055
-
-
118,905
54,000
47,228
-
7,356
5,821
118,905
4,358
1
-
-
8,440
5,000
1,276
-
164
-
8,440
-
-
-
-
74,577
41,000
30,200
-
3,377
-
74,577
-
-
-
160,000
150,000
150,000
-
-
-
-
160,000
-
\
60,750
050
848
24,886
10,000
14,686
-
«»
-
24,686
213
-
-
548
9,779
8,500
1,279
-
-
-
9,779
891
-
-
-
175,737
0 75,000
c 95,694
-
-
5,048
176,737
1,146
-
-
-
18,094
15,000
1,050
-
2,635
-
18,094
84,821
-
-
-
88,980
5,000
58,960
-
-
-
63,960
-
-
7,084
860
8,175
8,000
175
-
-
-
8,175
90,989
$33,000
1,700
-
88,854
65,000
8,854
-
-
-
68,854
-
800
18,922
47,178
25,000
22,178
-
-
-
47,178
48^5
10,000
-
-
157,267
45,000
108,550
-
3.717
-
157,267
71,219
-
"
-
232,844
' 150,000
77,857 '
5,187
-
232,841
2,184
-
-
-
14,224
3,500 j
d 4,500)
5,710 i
-
14
500
14,2-J4
30,888
i
« 15,302 1
/22.853
28,058
135,485
70,000
65,485
-
-
135,485
a Fall amount has been subscribed for; company has voted to purchase and extend the plant of the
W«etboroagh Electric Light and Power Oo. when arranged for by the directors.
b Fomitoie. c Under investigation. d Mortgage on real estate,
tf Timber rights. / Railroad, steamboat, etc.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. ' [1894.
Abttract of Cebtificateb or Cokditios
Wblte, Sod Compuy, .
WblttD MsahlMWorlM,
WhlUog P«pflr Oom.
puur, . . . ,
WUlmmn Ca-aparulTt
WblHImr OottOD Ullli,
WblUtir Huhlns Com
WII1S7 Compsny, .
WlUlam a. Ball Com-
WnUuD H. Bum* Com-
pmy, . . . .
Wllllui H. lUyiDoacl
Oro™i70oiD|»nr((or
IBM). , , . .
Wllllui H. RariDODd
0rocorf Company, .
F»b. IS,
Nov. 1«,
on. IB,
Job. \i.
M.y JJ,
Mu. It,
July 1>,
1 Oct. 31,
*aa,ix«
iin,su
2,000
(3«t.89S
*ui.O(w
K. E.
-
S.I18
S1,8SI
82.(00
H.0OO
H
w,aes
ie,»7
to,sofi
1894.1
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
217
of Corporations — Con tinned.
A88BT8 — Cod.
■ So
o ■ u
^tf a
o-- —
(
«•
•
•
s
Profi
B8.
1
83
a
o
gt)
o
o
« a
A'
•
c8
cS *
&<
3
tt
I
94,078
129,897
1,348
1,150
4,845
95,074
28,972
2,188
483,e87
33,507
61,315
224
7.20O
17,502
198,567
4,832
$100,000
2,500
c 1,800
21,216 101
135,406
104,121
153,098
7.500
$2,749
2,600
3,965
1,634
20O
(13,858
580
1,808
3
o
25,043 $2,115
IiIABIUTIEB.
2,175
4,086
34,343
$188,264
1,192,662
862,402
3,423
68,605
122,068
26^479
190,904
98,279
9,536
1,366,106
207,090
507,086
7,420
11,217
93,220
326,075
11,179
41,617
226,248
303,000
830,107
$125,000
600,000
300.000
1,665
36,000
120,000
15,000
26,000
60,000
6,000
600,000
75,000
$11,604
189,419
62.402
1,174
a 164
33,605
1,600
11,470
69,301
48,077
3.447
516,466
100,425
$1,366
300,000 270,601
6,600
11,000
40,000
50,000
10,000
10,000
150,000
100,000
100,000
920
a Interest ondrawn.
f Special \otinn.
i Ri'scrve for dividend.
16,907 I 10,000
b Contingent fund.
/ Dividend.
53,220
3,435
1,014
15,846
0 9,828
76,248
190,061
206,696
6,091
c Copyrights.
ff Bnrplus.
$304
853,243
325,000
88
«
ft .
M 0
o o
^S
O OS
^8
•
s £
es
l*^
«
$138,264
$50,000
1,192,662
176,000
862,402
6832
3,423
96,603
202
89
249,640
27,823
1,468
68,605
122,968
26,479
-
18,285
-
217
^
272,640
-
165
-
6,443
/3,000
^10,039
1
A 20,000
411
-
1,906
98,279
9,536
1,366,106
8,842 207,090
8,260 607,036
7,420
11,217
93,220
326,075
11,179
41,617
226,248
803,090
i 3,000 330,107
16.997
d Book plates.
h Rcterve enrpius.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
AbatrcKt of Cbkttficatbs of Cohdition
WlllUroB.FIjnt
WillUma Uarkel,
Winumaburgb Co-aper
cULIOD, Tbe.
WlnDlitrnmal Compu)',
Wire Gooda Compuny,
Jbd. li.
Fab. »>,
Jmn. 17,
Das. 18,
Jan. S2,
July 18,
100,000
30,000
u,ooo
160,000
11,000
12,000
30,000
MIO,000
!G,000
il
«ux.
»21,001
$»^T<
«.s;«
-
3a.iTo
»,000
1S1,M
10,000
a.(!r.
11,000
3,S70
al,8«
"^
::
3Ol.»0t
si,ooo
..,»
IWW
i,oa
1,000
10 .Mi
iot.000
*,0K
10,370
V"
3,M0
.^
<»,«»
G BhonM hav* Imob.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
219
of CorporcUions — Continued.
A88XT8— Cod.
■ So
^ «i u
$17,770
40,000
24,611
57,826
05,779
3
a
«
&4
•
0
«a
8 .
8
a<8
1
8*3
S
3
n
19.030
28
1,588
42,428
06,600
4,260
7,260
24,000
80,000
1,500
4,158
$5,000
$4,615
c 300,000
8,410
2,066
12,680
11,600
12,300
$96,871
220
581
4,481
3,657
209
4,661
2,490
Ltabilitibb.
o
Eh
$88,771
140,676
62,696
404,109
148,218
115,600
61,106
5,688
2,000
36,702
695,329
100,966
222,732
80,760
86,671
69,850
510,351
132,452
10,045
15,000
40,994
M
u
o
3
a
.0
Q
&
$50,000
100,000
30,000
100,000
100,000
51,900
36,000
3,600
2,000
20,000
300,000
50,000
150,000
12.000
12,000
30,000
600,000
25,000
6,100
46,100
15,000
80,000
a$87,120
37,788
32,696
190,280
7,334
27,500
i 14,316
I 610,000
1,738
14,379
221,660
60,966
17,689
18,769
24,671
39,860
10,361
66,883
4,545
16
10,994
(US
o
■Si
6
uO
0 0
**s
« 01
erv
reel
•
<2*
Eh
$1,661
-
V-
$2,788
-
113,820
-
10,879
-
36,200
-
690
-
400
-
1,328
-
173,660
-
-
$30,000
1,100
17,543
50,669
35,883
37,500
$88,771
140,576
62,096
404,109
148,213
115,600
61,106
5,638
2,000
35,702
096,329
100,966
222,732
30,769
36,671
69,850
610,351
132,452
10,645
80,998
16,000
40,994
a Incladcs $16,000 mortgage on real eetate and machinery. b Mortgage. c Ferry franchise.
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of CERTiPiCATEa of Condition
WoiniD>> Joarnil. Pro-
Jddo ii,
Woodward mnd Brown
Ptano Cooper, , .
Sepl.ai,
ffir." °-r':
aepLyi.
DveWorl«Comp»Er,
Apr. a.
Woroerter Dry Good*
Compuy, Tbe. .
WorcMler E lectilc Light
Compiny, Ttae, .
WorooBter Enveiope Co ,.
*r Fire Appli-
'ompuy, Tbe. .
er Gu UgH
iny, .
■ l«r Unohlne
er Reed Chmlr
er Steam Heat-
mpsny. ,
er SioroLgeConi'
p r Theatre Amo-
M»y ],
Un. 31,
Jan. ia.
.Tao. i,
Apr. W,
BepI, 12,
Har. H,
May as,
July IS,
•10,000
TS.OOO
00,000
30,000
4,000
200,000
360,000
S8,000
•i,Gge
-
$3,800
2.600
tioo
ssfioa
With
B.E.
33.260
-llh
R.B.
16,000
i9,«e3
6S,S3T
12.000
wllh
R. E.
191,000
1 .
.,»
„.,.
2o.6es
with
R.B.
n.Mo
wllh
R.K,
' "
17,000
60,000
-
1^
-
•3.0C
«3,M»
»0,1
100
...
6,000
I*.;
wHh
fd'gi
1
.,.-
IS,*
1B,T43
100,8.
31,023
S0.1
-1
J.30.:
1N.tl6
13,126 I
14,331
And toola.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
221
of Corporations — Continaed.
Assets --Con.
Liabilities.
Patent Righto.
•
a
!
3
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
Gapiul Stock.
•
1
Balance Profit
and Lobs.
Reserve for De-
preciation.
•
3
-
$10,000
$18,000
$10,000
$3,000
-
-
-
$13,000
$16,9tt
-
$12,208
20,473
134,206
75,000
69,206
-
-
-
184,206
201
-
-
4,048
12,000
12,000
-
-
-
-
12,000
5^5
-
-
-
50,076
30,000
19,882
-
$248
-
60,076
110
-
-
1,478
6,100
6,000
100
-
I ,
6,100
46,843
-
6,872
-
112,709
60,000
66,582
-
-
$6,127
112,709
-
-
-
-
20,033
20,000
-
-
88
-
20,033
1,010
-
1,886
-
7,002
4,000
2,889
-
—
118
7,002
100,434
$9,000
-
-
287,114
200,000
79,114
-
8,000
-
287,114
104,714
-
-
-
156,798
50,000
81,273
-
25,526
-
166,798
4,668
-
-
-
16,987
10,000
8,109
-
-
-
18,109
-
-
65,078
-
349,271
200,000j
4,500
alOO,000
-
44,771
-
849,271
16,1A3
\
3,200
-
39.266
38.000
-
-
1,266
-
89,266
-
-
6 30,000
00,426
103,200
85,000
50,000
18,200
-
-
103,200
1,682
24,053
886
20,203
51,914
c 1,914
-
-
-
61,914
28,322
-
-
-
690,057
! 500,000)
131,163
d 10,140
i -
48,764
-
690,067
' 200
-
-
4,800
7,061
7,000
61
-
-
-
7,061
8,000
8,000
-
-
16,000
16,000
400
-
-
600
16,000
10,413
8,000
1,600
-
62,506
30,000
30,564
-
1,941
-
62,606
-
-
-
-
25,509
13,000
11,000
-
1,509
-
25,609
20,000
-
-
96,200
61,200
045,000
-
■» .
-
96,200
19,078
-
-
920
41,512
86,000
6,612
-
~
-
41,612
a Bonds.
d Divfdands anpidd.
b Oars, etc.
e Mortgage.
c $400 additional estimated liabilities.
222
ANNUAL RETURNS OP CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Abstract of Certificates
OF Condition
When Certificate was
Filed.
Date of Meeting.
1
S 1 Capital Stock as fixed
"a ' by the Corporation.
A88BTB.
NAME OF CORPO-
RATION.
Real Estate.
% Land and Wa-
v ter Power.
•
a
2
o
P
R. B.
•
^6
II
Worcester Wire Com-
pany
1804.
June 1,
1804.
May 20,
$66,000
$20,000
$40,000
Worcester Woolen Mill
Company, The, .
May 26,
Feb. 10,
00,000
1
82,087
with
real
estate
.
Worklogmen's Building
Association,
Apr. 6,
Mar. 16.
100,000
101,614
with
R.B.
.
66,080
Worthy Paper Company,
Feb. 14,
Jan. 23,
100,000
73,406
with
R.B.
20,806
10,011
Woven Cane Fabric Com-
pany, The, .
Oct. 8,
Sept. 20,
6,000
-
~
-
■m
4,9U
Wright and Potter Print-
ing Company, The, .
Feb. 2,
Jan. 18,
60,000
-
.
.
28,670
31,021
Wright Machine Com-
pany, « • • .
Apr. 12,
a Mar. 8,
16,600
-
-
-
0,001
2,907
Wright Manufacturing
Company, .
Feb. 10,
Jan. 16,
60,000
20,000
with
R.E.
28.022
20,006
Wrought Iron Casting
Company, •
Jan. 22,
a • .
b
26,000
-
-
-
14,747
8,010
Total Certificates Filed,
1,S38
291,933,819
131,916,785
17,355,854
37,439,279
88,271,726
U6ll38^]7
Deduct Duplicates,
• • •
• • •
47
4,817.500
1,917,292
225,914
17,129^140
871,248
1,121,284
1,752,IS1
Total Corporations, .
1,791
287,116,319
129^493
36^,931
87.159,442 198,38i,]3l
a Adjourned.
b Not held, statement of Not. 27, 1803.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
223
of Corporations — Continued.
A88ST8— Oon.
LlABILITISS.
f4
113
•
a
•a
a
1
e
m
i
1
1
Balance Profit
and Loss.
•
3
o
Eh
Capital Btook.
1
•
E
s
Balance Profit
and Loss.
Reserve for De-.
preciation.
&
withC.ae
D. B.
-
-
-
$125,000
$100,000
$25,000
-
-
-
$125,000
$80,006
-
-
122,153
00,000
1
8.030
-
$24,128
-
122.153
-
-
$107
-
157,350
'«••«<« !al;r
j 6 $541
24.809
$20,000
157.850
20,501
-
-
-
142,312
100,000
26,497
1
16,815
-
142,312
880
-
-
-
5,785
5,000
-
-
785
-
5,786
10,715
e 23,408
80,675
50,000
8,622
-
22,514
8.530
80.676
0,412
8,373
-
26.273
15,600
1
7,590
-
-
3.183
26.273
00,046
-
-
-
144,662
60,000
25,244
-
18,500
40,822
144.662
22,081
-
d338
-
41,076
25,000
11,888
-
4.238
41.076
n4,SI!,632
4,0Q3,6S8
60m580
14,061,771
540,355,489
284,423,863
148.006t595
29,115,764
59.407,886
15.395.027
540.087.639
3,060,853
35,370
336,835
167,303
• 0,048,500
^ 4,623,302
3.810,864
4,245
553.877
60,802
9,053,000
111,510,780 3,068,258
50,883,745
13,894,378
531,306,809
279^00,561 144,195,731 29,111,519
1
58,854.009 ^15^225
531j»34.549
a Divid
cType,
end.
fixtures.
etc.
b
d
Acconnt
Fumltni
sale of 24 ]
e and flxtn
Sdge Hill
res.
Street.
224 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
GENERAL STATEMENT FOR 1894.
OrgantzoLions.
Capital stock of 241 corporations, organized under P. S. chaps. 106, 115,
and 117, $11,188,500
Without capital, 233 religious, benevolent, library or charitable corpora-
tions, organized under P. S. chaps. 40 and 115; chap. 404, Acts of
1887 ; chaps. 134 and 429, Acts of 1888 ; chap. 421, Acts of 1890, and
chap. 367, Acts of 1894,
Capita] stock of 1 corporation (Manufacturing company), re-organized
under P. S. chap. 106, sect. 22, 100,000
Capital stock of 11 street railway corporations, organized under P. S.
chap. 113, 862,000
Capital stock of 2 railroad corporations, organized under P. S. chap. 112, 6,020,000
Without capital, 12 mutual fire insurance companies, under chap. 214,
Acts of 1887, and chap. 522, Acts of 1804,
Total $17,170,500
Capital paid in.
Capital paid up of 202 corporations, under P. S. chap. 106, sects. 46 and
48, 18,537,400
Capital partially paid of 8 street railway corporations, under P. S. chap.
113, sects. 14 and 19, 323,500
Total * . . . . 18,860,900
Investyncnts.
^ Capital invested by 41 corporations, certificates under P. S. chap. 106,
sects. 46 and 48, in real estate, f 1,716,290
Capital invested by 131 corporations, certificates under P. S. chap. 106,
sects 46 and 48, in personal estate, 3,400,316
Capital on hand by 146 corporations, certificates under P. S. chap. 106,
sects. 46 and 48, in cash, 3,420,794
Total, ♦8i537~40b
Capital of 8 street railway corporations not required to state investment, $387,000
Increase.
Capital increased by 42 corporations, under P. S. chap. 106, sect. 56, . $7,528,525
Of which there has been paid in, ,...:.. . 7,528,525
Capital increased by 4 street railway corporations, under P. S. chap. 113,
sect. 15, as amended by chap. 366, Acts of 1887, 870,000
Reduction.
Capital reduced by 19 corporations, under P. S. chap. 106, sect. 57, . $2,006^50
Present capital, 671,650
22 corporations dissolved by the supreme judicial court.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
225
Certificates of Condition, or Annual Returns for 1894 under
P. S. 106, Sect. 54.
1,838 oertlfleatM filed, 47 of which were for former years, or were duplicateB, reducing the
namber to 1,791 corporations which made retnme.
Total fixed capital of theee 1,791 corporations,
Atteta,^ €u /ollowa : —
Total real estate (in some returns machinery is included),
Land and water power,
Buildings
Machloery (sometimes included with real estate, and excluded here),
Cash and debts receivable
Manufactures, merchandise, material and stock in process
Patent rights, .
Miscellaneons,
Balance profit and loss,
Total assets of corporations a$ they foot up in the table,' «
LiabiHtie*, cu /ollowa : —
ToUieaptUi stock (paid in or regarded as a liability),
Toul debU.
Reserves (some corporations give total, others give this item as a detail) ^
Balance profit and loss,
Reserve for depredation (this reserve is held by some corporations for other purposes, and
is so stated in a note),
Total liabilities of corporations as they foot up In the table,*
$287,116,319
$129,999,498
17,129,940
36,508,081
87,160,442
108,386,136
111,510,780
8,968,2ft8
59,883,745
13,894,378
581,306,809
$279,800,661
144,195,731
29,111,519
58,854,009
15,334,225
531,934,549
> In tabuloHnfft the fraction of a dollar, if over 50 cents, is added as one dollar; if less than 50 cents, it
is dropped.
' But the totals of assets and liabilities of corporations failing to give totals are here added to those given
(in all 1,791).
Annual Returns under P. S. Chap. 109.
Four Companiea for the Transmission of Intelligence by Electricity : —
CkpltAl paid In,
ReeelpU for a year,
Bxpeodf tnrea for a year,
Real estate owned, and value,
Cash on hand,
Credits on book aecount,
Amount of Indebtedneaa,
$20,065,000 00
6,740:823 88
6,810,297 19
877,000 00
1,608,447 04
8,822,842 74
8,505,133 48
226 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Fees Payable in the Secrbtart's Office under the Public Statutes
AND Amendments thereto and Other Acts for the Formation and
Regulation of Corporations.
Organizations.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Organization, including the
Agreement of Association, together with the issuing of the Secretary's
Certificate of Incorporation, having ^^ the force and effect of a special
charter," under Public Statutes, chap. 106, sects. 21, 22, 84, and Acta of
1884, chap. 180, sect. 1, one-twentieth of one per cent, of the amount of the
capital stocky as fixed by the agreement of the Association.
This fee (P. S. chap. 106, sect. 84) shall not be less, in any case, than five
dollars^ nor shall it exceed two hundred dollars.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Organization, including the
Agreement of Association, and issuing the Secretary's Certificate of Inccr-
PORATION, under P. S. chap. 40, sect. 17, or P. S. chap. 115, sect. 4, or P. S.
chap. 115, sect. 6, or P. S. chap. 117, sect. 4, or under chap. 404 of 1887,
sect. 5, or chap. 421 of 1890, sect. 8, or chap. 867 of 1894, sect. 7, Fitc
Dollars.
Insurance Corporations.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Organization, including the
Agreement of Association, together with the issuing of the Secretary's Cer-
tificate OF Incorporation, having *' the force and effect cf a special charter/'
under chap. 522 of 1894, sect. 30, Twenty-five Dollars.
Railroad and Street Railway Corporations.
For filing and recording the Articles of Association, and accompanying
Certificates, and issuing the Secretary's Certificate of Incorporation,
under P. S. chap. 112, sects. 43, 44 and 1st cl. of sect. 45 ; P. S. chap. 112,
sect. 44; P. S. chap. 112, sect. 227; and P. S. chap. 113, sect. 8, Fiftt
Dollars.
Joint Stock Companies under General Laws in Force previous to 1870.
Fdr filing and recording the Certificate of Organization of companies
found under chap. 133 of 1851, or chap. 61 of the General Statutes previous
to June 9, 1870, and not before recorded. Five Dollars.
Various Other Certificates.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Payment of Capital, under
P. S. chap. 106, sects. 46, 48, One Dollar.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Condition (or annual return) ,
under P. S. chap. 106, sects, 54, 84, Five Dollars.
1894.} PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 227
For filing and recording the Certificate of Increase of Capital, under
P. S. chap. 106y sects. 56, 84, '^ one-twerUieth of one per cent, of the amount
by which the capital is increased : providedy that the amount so to be paid shall
not, when added to the amount or amounts previously paid for filing and
recording certificates under sect. 11 or sect. 12, and under sect. 34 of said
Act" (chap. 224 of 1870; P. S. chap. 106, sects. 21, 22, 56, 84), ''exceed
in any case the sum of two hundred dollars"
For filing and recording the Certificate of Reduction of CAPrrAL, under
P. S. chap. 106, sect. 57, One Dollar.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Authorization, under P. S.
chap. 106, sects. 58, 74, 84, One Dollar.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Confirmation of Organiza-
tion, under P. S. chap. 106, sect. 79, One Dollar.
For filing and recording the Certificate op Confirmation of Proceedings,
under P. S. chap. 106, sect. 80 ($1.00 only). One Dollar, or Twenty-five
Cents each Page.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Addition to or Change of
Business, under sects. 51, 52, 84 of the P. S., ^' one-twentieth of one per cent,
of the amount of the capital stock of the corporation.*^
For filing and recording the Certificate of Condition of Foreign Corpo-
rations, under sect. 1 of chap. 841 of 1891, Five Dollars.
For filing and recording the Certificates of Increase and Reduction of
CAPrrAL op Foreign Corporations, under sects. 3 and 4 of chap. 341 of
1891, One Dollar.
Railroad and Railway Corporations.
For filing the Certificate of Subscription, and of partial payment of
Capital Stockj under P. S. chap. 112, sects. 85, 86, Fifty Dollars.
For filing and recording the certificate relating to Branches and Exten-
sions of railroads, under P. S. chap. 112, sect. 139, Fifty Dollars.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Increase >of Capital op rail-
road corporations, under P. S. chap. 112, sect. 45, d. 2 ; and P. S. 113, 15,
or under Special Acts of Incorporation, One Dollar.
Insurance Companies.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Increase of Capital, under
chap. 522 of 1894, sect. 36, Five Dollars.
For filing and recording the Certificate of Reduction of Capital, under
chap. 522 of 1894, sect. 37, Five Dollars.
For ofiAcial copies of any of the records mentioned in chap. 224 of 1870,
P. S. obaps. 106, 112, 113, 115, etc.. Twenty-five Cents for one Page, and
if it contains more than one page, at the rate of twenty cents for each page
after the first, and twenty-five cents for the certification of the same. * And
tbe same fees for other corporation copies.
228
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
Oeneral Laws under which Corporations may he Formed; also Regulated,
PUBUO STATims.
Chapters.
BecUoiM.
88
88
88
38
30
40
82
105
105
106
106
106
106
106
106
106
106
106
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
112
112
112
113
114
115
116
117
118 •
26
48
44
48-60
16-20
1-8
40-45
7
8
9
10
11
12
IS
14
16
44
228
225
BelaUng to the formation of roUgioas societies.
Respeoting Protestant Episcopal churches.
Organization of Methodist Episcopal churches.
Incorporation of Roman Catholic churches.
Of donations and conveyances for pious and charitable
Of library corporations.
Of cemeteries.
Of certain powers, duties and liabilities of corporations.
Of dissolution of corporations.
Formation of manufacturing and other corporations.
For carrying on any mechanical, mining or manufacturing business.
For oarrrying on agricultural, horUcnltural, quarrying, ice or printing baslness.
For carrying on co-operative business or trade.
For carrying on fishing business, and opening outlets, canals or ditches, etc.
For making and selling gas, generating and furnishing steam or hot water.
For transacting the business of a common carrier, etc.
For erecting and maintaining a hotel or public hall. (Amended, Acts 1888, chap. 116.)
For carrying on any lawful business, not otherwise provided for, etc.
For capitalizing the indebtedness of banlcrnpt and insolvent corporations.
Of swine-slaughtering associations.
Of canal and bridge corporations.
Of companies for the transmission of intelligence by electricity.
Of aqueduct corporations, how Incorporated, etc.
Of proprietors of wharves, general fields, and real estate lying in common.
Of railroad corporations and railroads.
Of certificate of incorporation.
Of railroad tracks for private use.
Of railroads and telegraphs In foreign countries.
Of street railway corporations.
Of agricultural and horticultural societies.
Of societies for charitable, educational and other purposes, formation, etc. (Sec-
tions 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 repealed, Aete of 1888, chap. 429, sect. 21. See alao chap
ter 489, Acts of 1890, and chapter 437, Acts of 1894.)
Of savings banks and institutions for savings. (Repeulvd, Acts of 1S»4, chap. 3170
Of co-operative (savings fund and loan associations) banks.
Of banks and banking; formation of banks, etc.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10
229
Oeneral Laws under which Corporations may be Formed — Continued.
Acta of—
Chapters. Bectiona
1888,
1888,
. 1888,
1883,
1883,
1884,
1884,
1884,
1885,
1886,
1885,
1886,
1886,
1886,
1886,
1886,
1886,
1887,
1887,
1887,
1887,
1887,
1887,
1887,
18S8,
1888,
1888,
1888,
1888,
1888,
1888,
1888,
1888,
1888,
1889,
1880,
iS80,
isaop
196
9U
251
9S
268
180
330
78
240
265
810
125
200
222
230
337
846
214
216
225
248
366
385
404
134
158
165
177
188
821
826
887
413
429
150
222
309
816
1-5
1-4
1-3
14
1.2
1-6
1-6
1
1.2
1-4
1-3
1-3
1.2
1,2
1-6
1-9
1-112
1-7
1.2
1-6
1,2
1-1 1
1-8
1-6
1,2
1,2
1,2
1,2
1,2
1.2
1-16
1-28
1-22
1,2
1-4
1-6
Snlarging tho powers and duties of associations for charitable and other
pnrposes. (dection 1 repealed. Acts of 1888, chap. 429, sect. 81.)
Of toe formation of relief societies by the employees of railroad and steam-
boat corporations.
Relating to co operative saving fund and loan associations.
Changing the names of the foregoing associations to that of " Co-operative
Banks."
To prohibit certain medical societies from conferring degrees.
Formation of corporations to examine and guarantee tiUea to real estate.
Concerning foreign corporations having a nsnal place of basiness in this
Commonwealth.
Trustees of churches or religious societies may become bodies corporate, in
certain cases.
Authoriaing the formation of corporatlone for making, selling and distrib-
uting gas for heating, cooking, chemical and mechanical purposes.
Authorizing the formation of corporations for the purpose of cremating the
bodies of the dead .
Relating to change of business by corporations.
Authorizing railroad corporations to Join certain relief societies.
Authorizing corporations to issue special stock to be held by their em>
ployees only.
Bxteodlng the powers of certain Insurance companies.
Relating to the Protestant Bplscopal and Reformed Episcopal churches.
Authorlzlngstreetrailway companies to use the cable system as a motive
power.
Relating to gas companies.
To amend and codify the statutes relating to insurance. (See Acta of 1894,
chap. 622.)
Relating to co-operative banks.
Requiring annual returns from certain corporations.
Concerning limited partnerships.
In relation to the increase of the capital stock of str«et railway companies.
To authorize gas companies to furnish electric light.
To provide for the incorporation of churches.
Authorizing the incorporation of labor or trade organizations.
In relation to (he exemption of the property of certain literary and other
associations from taxation.
Concerning the investments of mutual life insurance companies.
Relative to the stock of associations formed for charitable, educational and
other pnrposes.
In relation to voting by proxy at meetings of corporations.
Authorizing foreign manufacturing corporations to hold real estate in this
Commonwealth.
To enable incorporated religious societies to make by-laws.
In relation to mortgage loan and investment companies.
In relation to safe deposit, loan and trust companies.
Relating to fraternal beneficiary organizations. (Repealed, Acts of 1804,
chap. 367.)
RelaUBg to co-operative banks.
Relative to tho voting as proxies and the soliciting of proxy votes by ofSoers
of corporations and tne filing of lists of stockholders.
Requiring cemetery corporations to keep records of all conveyances of
burial lots and contracts in relation thereto.
In relation to the issue of mortgage bonds by street railway companies.
230
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894
Oenerai Laws under which Corporations may he Formed — Cootinned.
Acts of—
Chapters.
Sections.
1889,
328
1 4
KelatlDg to the annual retnrns of railroad corporations.
18S9,
S42
1,2
Relating to investments of safe deposit, loan and trust companies.
1889,
1889,
1889,
378
427
434
1.2
1-7
Authorizing title insurance companies to examine and guarantee titles U*
personal property as ^-ell as real estate.
To provide for the supervision of foreign corporations engaged in the hM*\
ness of selling or uegoliniing bonds, mortgHges, notes or other chOMS id
action. (Amended by chap. 275, Acts 1^91.)
Relating to the transmission of intelligence by tcIei)hone.
1889,
1890,
452
63
1-3
1.2
Relative to the carrying on of the business of savings and co-operative banks.
and of banking, mortgage loan and investment and trust buaiuens.
Relating to the taxation of co-operative banks.
1890,
78
1,2
Relating to loans of the balances of co-operative banks.
1890,
1890,
191
199
1.2
1,2
Relating to the par value of associations for charitable, educational and
other purposes.
Relating to certificates of condition of corporations.
1890,
243
1.2
To amend the Public Statutes relating to co-operative banks.
1890,
310
1-5
In relation to the business of cooperative banking.
1890,
816
1-3
To amend an act in relation to safe deposit, loan and trust companies.
1890,
821
1-3
Concerning the insolvency of foreign corporations.
1890,
326
1,2
Relating to the reduction of capital stock by street railway corporations.
1890,
1890,
329
841
1-3
1-3
Concerning the use of names by certain corporations organized under the laws
of other States or countries and doing business in this Commonwealth.
Concerning fraternal beneficiary corporations.
1890,
1800,
1890,
871
400
421
1-3
1,2
1-29
In relation to bonds ironed by electric light companies. (Sec Acts of 1'494,
chap. 5U1.)
Relating to aftsefiRmentfi for disability and death funds by fraternal bene-
ficiary organizations.
Relating to assessment insurance.
1890,
1891,
1891,
1891,
1891,
439
163
189
195
239
1,2
1,2
1-8
1,2
1,2
To regulate the incorporation of clubs. (Amended hy chap. 226, Acta of
1893, and chap. 542, AcU of 1894 }
To authorize beneficiary associations to return to members certain additions
to death funds.
To authorize the formation of corporations for the purpose of generating
and furnishing hydrostatic pressure for mechanical power.
To authorize foreign life insurance companies to transact the business of
accident insurance.
Relating to the weekly payment of wages by corporations.
1891,
257
1-4
Relating to corporate names.
1891,
265
1.2
Relating to officers of incorporated churches.
1891,
289
1.2
Relating to declaration of dividends by certain insurance companies.
1891,
1891,
1891,
1891,
341
360
368
870
1-6
1-6
1,2
1-19
Concerning foreign corporations having a usual place of business in thU
Commonwealth. (See Aots of 1894, chap. 641.)
Authorizing the Commissioner of Corporations to change the names of
corporations.
Relating to reinsurance in companies not snthorlzed to do baslneas in this
Commonwealth.
To enable cities and towns to manufacture and distribute gas and electricity.
1891,
1891,
1892,
1892,
382
403
40
47
1-4
1,2
1.2
To prohibit the issuing of certain obligations to be redeemed in nnmcrical
order or in any arbitrary order of nrecedence.
To authorize the Commissioners of Havings Banks to prevent foreign co-
operative banking corporations from transacting business in this Com-
monwealth.
In relation to the admission of fraternal beneficiary organizations of oUier
Butes.
Relating to insurance risks of mutual boiler insurance companies.
1892,
83
-
In relation to the employment of women and minors for the pnrpoee of
manufacturing.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
231
Qemertjl Laws under which CorporoMona may he Formed — Continued.
Acta of — Chapters., Sections.
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1892,
1802,
1892,
1893,
1898,
1898,
1888,
1803,
1808,
1893,
18K3,
1893,
1883,
1893,
1893»
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1804,
1804,
1894,
1894,
110
129
141
171
192
198
201
228
254
827
352
357
389
410
435
47
54
114
117
131
224
1.2
1-4
1-3
1»2
1.2
1.2
1-3
1-3
1-4
1-3
1-3
1,2
1-3
1-3
1.2
1-4
226
1.2
230
1.2
274
1.2
315
1-3
321
1-3
418
1-6
454
1-11
60
1,2
108
-
126
1,2
133
1-4
137
1-4
147
1.2
274
1.2
299
-
Aathorizliig steam ndlroads to use electricity as a motive power.
Relating to taxes upon certain accident, fidelity and guaranty insurance
companies.
To authorize educational and religious associations to define grounds and
ways under ihelr control and lo enforce regulations concerning the same.
To require railroad companies to maintain crossings to give access to lands
cut off by railroads.
To anthorize street railway companies to refund their funded debt In cer-
tain cases.
Relative to the change of names of corporations.
Relating to changes in the names of certain corporations.
Relating to crossings of railroads, street railways, highways, and other ways.
Requiring street railway companies to contribute to the expense of printing
their reports.
In relation to enforcing the liability of shareholders in trust companies.
In relation to the employment of children.
Relating to the hoars of labor of minors and women employed in manu-
facturing and mechanical establishments.
To require railroad corporations to provide mileage tickets which shall be
accepted for passage and fare upon all railroad lines in this Common-
wealth.
To prohibit the deduction of wages of employees engaged at weaving.
In relation to fraternal beneficiary corporations and other corporations or-
ganized for the transaction of insurance upon the assessment plan.
To amend the law relative to fraternal beneficiary corporations so as to
further the formation of such organizations among permanent em-
ployees of towns and cities.
To enlarge the limits within which certain mutual fire insurance com-
panies may do business.
To limit the time within which safe deposit, loan and trust companies
shall organize and commence business.
Relating to fidelity insurance and corporate snrety.
To provide for quarterly statements by railroad corporations.
Relative to trnst deposits with the treasurer of the Commonwealth.
Relating to the incorporation of clubs. (Amending chap. 430, Acts'of 1890 ;
see also chap. 542, Acts of 1804.)
Relative to the business of savings banks, Institutions for savings and trust
companies. (Repealed, Acts of 1804, chap. 317.)
Relative to telegraph and telephone companies.
Relating to the increase of capital stock by corporations owning or operat-
ing a railroad or railway by steam or other power. (Repealed, Acts of
1894, chap. 472.) . ^ ^
Relative to the admission of fraternal beneficiary organizations of other
States.
To terminate the endowment business of fraternal beneficiary corporations.
Relative to the establishment of municipal gas and electric lighting plants.
Relative to the powers of fraternal beneficiary corporations which limit
their membership to the permanent employees of the Commonwealth
and of towns and cities. .... _j i i.
To permit insurance companies of this Commonwealth having special char-
ters to be governed by chapter two hundred and fourteen of the Acts
of the year eighteen hundred and eighty-seven.
In relation to the election of assessors or standing committees of parishes
and incorporated religious societies.
In relation to accident insurance.
Relating to reinsurance.
Relative to insurance In foreign fire insurance companies.
Relative to real estate held by safe deposit, loan and trust companies.
Relative to the refusal of gas companies to furnish gas In certain cases.
232
ANNUAL EETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
GenercU Laws under which CorporaMona may be Formed — Concluded.
Aotsof—
Chapters.
Sections.
1804,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
1894,
800
816
817
826
827
828
842
860
867
880
881
460
452
462
472
1894, .
476
1894, .
500
1894,
501
1894, .
502
1894, .
506
1894, .
522
1894,
541
1894,
542
1894,
548
1,2
1-54
1-4
1,2
1,2
1,2
1-3
1-21
1-3
1,2
1-4
1-3
1-4
1-4
1,2
1.2
1,2
1-112
1-5
1-3
BelatiTe to mutual fire insurance companies.
To authorize gas and electric light companies to discontinue service for
non-payment of charges.
Revising and consolidating the statutes relating to savings hanks and Insti-
tutions for savings.
Relating to certain contracts for the conditional sale, lease or hire of rail.
road and street railway equipment and rolling stock, and providing for
the recording thereof.
To confer upon the Board of Qas and Electric Light Commissioners certain
powers in respect to regulating the price and quality of electric light.
Enlarging the list of henoflciaries in fraternal beneficiary corporations in
certain cases.
Relating to loans by co^>perative banks.
Prohibiting the issue of stock or scrip dividends by corporations.
Relating to fraternal beneficiary oi^fanizations.
Relative to the payment of the capital stock of aqueduct and water com.
panics.
Relative to the admission of certain foreign corporations to do business in
this Commonwealth.
Relative to iho issue of stock and bonds by gas and electric light companies.
Relative to the issue of capital stock and bonds by tel^raph, telephone,
aqueduct and water companies.
Relative to the issue of stock and bonds by railroad and street railway
companies.
Relating to the increase of capital stock by corporations owning or operat-
ing a railroad or railway by steam or other power, and of gas llgbt,
electric light, telegraph, telephone, aqueduct and water companies.
To prohibit foreign corporations from fssuing stock or other securities
upon the property, franchise or stock of certain domestic corporations.
Relating to tne par value of shares of the capital stock of certain corpora^
tions.
Relating to bonds issued by electric light companies.
Relative to the increase of the capital stock and bonds of railroad ooipora.
tions.
Relating to leases and consolidations of railroad and street railway com*
panies.
To amend and codify the statutes relating to insurance.
Relative to foreign corporations having a usual place of business in this
Commonwealth.
Relative to gaming and the illegal keeping and sale of intoxicating liquor
by incorporated clubs. (See chap. 439, Acts of 1890; also chap. 226,
Acts of 1894.)
Relative to the increase of the capital stock of street ndlway companies to
meet expenses incident to change of motive power.
1894.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10. 233
Public Statutes, Chap. 105, Sect. 40, of Dissolution.
^* When a majority in Dumber or interest of the members of a corporation
desire to close its concerns, they may apply by petition to the supreme judicial
court, setting forth in substance the grounds of their application; and the
court, after due notice to all parties interested, and a hearing, may, for
reasonable cause, decree a dissolution of the corporation. A corporation so
dissolved shall be deemed and held extinct in all respects as if its corporate
existence had expired by its own limitations."
[P. S. chap. 106, sect. 45.J
Returns to be made of Corporations dissolved by the Supreme Judicial
Court.
When a corporation is dissolved by the supreme judicial court, the clerk of
the courts for the county in which the decree or order for dissolution is made
shall forthwith make return thereof to the Secretary of the Commonwealth,
giving the name of the corporation dissolved, and the date upon which such
order or decree was made.
Certificates of Payment and Investment of Capital.
The attention of the officers of corporations is called to the requirements of
the corporation laws respecting the filing and recording of certificates of
payment and investment of capital. Special attention is asked to the fol-
lowing: Public Statutes, chap. 106, sects. 46, 48, 49, 60, 61.
Index, Records, Fees, Publications, Etc.
A card index has been prepared, embracing references to all acts of incor-
poration and amendments thereto of corporations created by the General
Court since the year 1780, and to every certificate recorded in the office under
c^eneral laws concerning joint stock and other corporations, since the year
1851, when the first was recorded. This index includes all railroad, railway,
insurance, manufacturing, mining and other business corporations, together
with associations for library, benevolent, educational and religious purposes,
•vbich havefi^d certificates of any kind in this office.
234 ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [181(4.
The records of religions and benevolent associations date only from the
year 1874, when the existing law for their formation, and for the filing of
their certificates in the Secretary's office, went into effect. The ofiBce has no
knowledge of the legal existence of those formed previously to 1874 under
general law, as the certificates of such organizations were requii*ed to be
^'recorded in the oflSce of the register of deeds for the county or district"
wherein they were located ; nor has it ofiScial information of any class of
corporations dissolved by the supreme judicial court previous to 1880.
Every fee paid into the office for recording under the provisions of chap.
224 of 1870 (P. S. chap. 106), and every subsequent corporation act (as well
as those for some years previous) , has been made a matter of record with the
certificate itself, the money being paid into the treasury at the time designated
by the statute. The propriety of such record is not only obvious, but the
record has been found to be necessary in order to the just assessment of
subsequent fees, dependent upon the amount of payments previously made.
{Vide chap. 356 of the Acts of 1871, or P. S. chap. 106, sect. 84, 3d d.)
Abstracts of the annual returns are made and published weekly by the
** Banker and Tradesman Company" of Boston. Other abstracts of the
original certificates are made by representatives of the press and others, for
the accuracy of which the office is not responsible.
1894.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 10.
235
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ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
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PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 10.
237
Table II. — Annual Returns^ Aggregates compiled from '* Certificates oj Con-
dition;' under Acts of 1870, 224, 33; 1874, 349, 1; and P. S. 106, 54.
FOR THB YEAR.
1870.
1871.
1872,
1873,
1874,
1875,
1876, .
1877,
1878,
1879,
1880, ,
1881, .
189^ .
1883, .
1884, .
1885, .
1880, .
1887, .
1888, .
1880. .
1890. .
1891, .
1802, .
1%93, .
IHW, .
urtng
ear.
li
•o>*
•g
•
*>4
1%
11
<
s
s
&
124
638
648
654
694
717
734
743
736
730
756
817
872
954
994
1,056
1.095
1,18S
1,806
1.809
1,445
1,688
1,612
1,687
1,791
57
58
11
13
80
11
19
9
3
12
15
21
16
26
18
14
4
55
38
34
32
39
46
47
181
596
659
667
724
728
753
752
739
742
771
838
888
1,012
1,070
1,009
1,237
1,344
1,403
1,477
1,577
1,658
1,734
Amount
of Capital
Paid In.
$39,019,227
114,134,786
122,570,023
131,253,840
141,761,304
140,405,253
150,889,066
147,665,201
140,856,554
142,429.708
148,605,224
161,027,122
109,960,708
184,621,238
193.427,031
103,516,551
104,411,397
200,324,689
213,724,932
210,823,771
229,227,098
239,583,854
260,087,231
268,001,568
279,800,561
$56,999,378
162.202,732
182,415,165
211,371,742
228,523,526
241,608,145
240,601,076
244,050,994
231,427,335
231,633,644
242,998,175
278,538.305
800,956,013
825,205,019
343,434,221
344,888,926
349,406,881
358,150,462
393,004,196
409,730,587
452,073,940
477,074,407
499,129,048
631,882,183
631,306,809
Total
Liabilities.
a$l8,383,5n
a 51,033,308
a 60,136,836
a 73,066,236
a 85,178,848
6245,520,263
6250,572,105
6252.772,780
6240,776,897
6270,701,031
6251,363,058
6287,019.164
6300,998,291
6886,484,860
6854,697,684
6355,486,400
6357,750,665
6366,246,827
6397.678,552
6413,620,108
6455,262,834
6470,036,971
6601,730,521
6 533,532,973
6531,934,549
a Not including capital.
6 Inclading capital and reHcrves.
238
ANNUAL RETURNS OF CORPORATIONS. [1894.
The following ^'associations" have applied in regular form for corporate
franchises, their certificates of organization being duly approved by the
Commissioner of Corporations and deposited in this ofilce, recorded, and
"charters" or, otherwise, "certificates of Incorporation" duly executed in
behalf of each ; but, no parties representing either of them appearing to claim
said charters or pay the legal fees, the said associations, having no legal
evidence of incorporation, are deemed in abeyance as corporations, until such
time as they shall fully comply with the requirements of law in such cases
made and provided. As there is no legal limit of time established within
which they must apply for, the certificate of their corporate existence, the said
charters are held for delivery, upon a compliance with the remaining pro-
visions of law in that respect.
NAME.
4
LooatioD.
Capital.
Date.
Feec
doe.
New Bngland Fire Safety Company, • • . .
BariQm Manufaotnring Compaay,
>
Boaton, .
Boston, .
$100,000
200,000
Jaly 0, 1872,
Oet. 7;i8T6,
fWOO
100 00
INDEX.
Page
^^^re^iM, CorpontloDs filing Certificates of Capital, 1870-94 235
" «• «• «• 1851-75, 235
" " of CoDditioD, 1870-94 287
** Organized, 1870-04, 235
1851-75, 285
'* iDinranoe, 1872-04 236
** " Railroad and Railway, 1878-04 288
*' Reorganized, 1870-04 235
Annual Betum§, or Certifloatee of Condition, Abstraota from, A to W, for the year 1804, 58-223
AMtockUlom, not clidmlng ohartera executed for them, 238
Oafi^eaUp nnder Pablio Btatntee, chapter 100, section 7, 45
CSbon^s <n /br Fa/us o/i9Aar««, Certificates of, 45
Ckanpe qf yanu of Oi>rpor€Mon*, 43
Obmp€mU§/br the T^mmiuUm €/ Intelligence by Electricity, nnder Public Statutes, chapter
100, 42,48
OMurOtoii, Certificates of, A to W. 58-228
Qn^/kJnaUon of Organization and Proceedings, Public Statutes, chapter 100, sections 70
and 80, 44
DUtohMon of Oorporatlooe, 48
** ' '* Returns of, by clerks of S. J. C, in the several counties, 46
JR^MVM Cbmp<my, Power of Attorney to a General Agent in Massachusetts, filed by, . . 45
#BM, payable In Secretary's ofllce, by Corporations, 226, 227
Cfeneral Agent in Maeeaehue^ta, Power of Attorney to, filed by Express Company, ... 45
General Law, nnder which Corporations may be dissolved, ........ 288
OemertU La»§, under which Corporations may be formed, 228-282
eeneral Statement tor 199i 224
M u u u Annual Returns, 225
IneorporaUontf cfe., under sereral sets of 1804, 47-57
JnofrparaHcne, wader Public Statutes, chapters 106,88,40,115,117; AcU 1887, chapter 404,
AcU 1888, chapter 420, and AoU ld04, chapter 867 5-22
" Insurance Companies, under Acts 1887, chapter 214, and Actt 1804, chapter 522, 23
" Joint Stock Companies, under Public Statutes, chapter 106, .... 5-12
*' Rellgioua, Charitable, etc.. Associations, with or without Capital Stock, under
PubHc Stetutes 115, 40, 117; AcU 1887, chapter 404; Acts 1888, chapter
429, AcU 1800, chapter 421, and AcU 1804, chapter 867 12-22
" Street Railway Companies, under Public SUtutes, chapter 113, section 8, 24, 25
Inereaee of CapUolt by ICaoufketuilng or other Joint Stock Companies, 80, 40
M «« by Railroad and Railway Companies, 88
huMiranoe OMnp€miee, Organization, 23
iiiesslmMf of Capltel Stock of New Companies 26-36
Mortgage Sonde, Issue of, by Street Railway Companies, 44
Jfame of Oorporatione, Change of ............. . 48
(^r^nlMBiioii of Insurance Companies, 28
** of Joint Stock Companies, Manufacturing, cU., 5-12
** of Religious, ChariUble, etc., AssocUtlons 12-22
** of Street Railway Companies, 84,25
OrganiaaWm and Proeeedtnge, Confirmation of, under PubUe Stetutes, chapter 106, sections
79 and 80, 44
Air Votue of Sharee, Certtfleates of, ohaoge In, 45'
240 INDEX.
Pag*
i\iymenl«/ Cbp<to/i9lodt, OorporatioDstoflleCertlfloafcMof 233
'* " " Joint Stock Oompanles, 2^-96
" '* " MaDofacturlDg Companies 26-36
** " *' Railroad and Railway Companies, 87
Power of Attorney to a General Agent in Ifa»9achu9ett9t filed by Express Company, . 45
Railroad Chmpanie$, Increase of Capital, 38
" " Payment of Capital, Partial, 37
Railway Companies, Payment of Capital, « . 37
" ** Street, Order of Approval for Issue of Mortgage Bonds, .... 44
*' •• " Organization, 24
" *• Redaction of Capital 88
Records, Indexes, Fees, Publications, etc., concerning 238, 234
Reduction of Capital, by Joint Stock Companies, 41
Reorganiaation as a Corporation 23
Shares, Change in Par Valne, Certificates of, 45
Street Railway Companies, Order of Approval for the Issue of Mortgage Bonds, ... 44
•* ** " Organization 24,25
" " " Increase of Capital, 39,40
" " «* Payment of Capital 37
" « *« Redaction of Capital 38
Table I. — Aggregates of Corporations, organized under Qeneral Laws, from 1851 to 1894, viz.,
Joint Stock, Library, Insurance, Railroad, Religious, etc., with amount of
Capital, Increase, Redaction, 236, 236
Table IL — Aggregate of Annual Returns, under section 83, chapter 224 of 1870; and section
54, chapter 106, Public Statutes; 1870-1894, 237
Transmission qf Intelligence by Electricity, Certificates of Companies and others, under Pub-
lic Statutes 109, section 13, 42,43
Value, Par, of Shares, Certificates of Change in, 45
PUBLIC DOCUMENT .... .... No. 42.
Sixth Annual Hepobt
or TBS
COMMISSIONEB
or
Foreign Mortgage
Corporations.
J ANU AR Y, 1895.
. BOSTON:
WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO., STATE PRINTERS,
18 Post Offics Square.
1805.
C0mm0itfoiealtlfe[ ai ptassatl^ttstlls.
Ofticb of thb Co]|]ii88ionb& of Foreign Mobtoaob Corfoba.tion8,
Boston, Feb. 7, 1895.
To the Honorable Senate and House of Bepresentatives in General Court
assembled.
The Commissioner of Foreign Mortgage Corporations, in
accordance with the provisions of law (chapter 427, Acts of
1889, and chapters 275 and 382, Acts of 1891, as amended
by chapter 303, Acts of 1893), has the honor to present his
annual report for the year 1894.
During the past year twenty-four companies have been
under the supervision of this office, fifteen of which are still
doing business according to law in this Commonwealth..
The following companies which did business here last
year have now ceased to be represented in this State,
viz. : —
American Security and Trust Company,
Ballou Banking Company, •
Colorado Securities Company, .
Debenture Investment Company, .
Investment Trust Company of America,
Leeds Improvement and Land Company,
Middlesex Banking Company,
Security Loan and Trust Company,
Sioux City, la.
Sioux City, la.
Denver, Col.
Dubuque, la.
Topeka, Kan.
Sioux City, la.
Middletown, Conn.
Des Moines, la.
Vermont Loan and Trust Company, . . • Grand Forks, N. D.
Three of these companies were the ones specified in the
commissioner's last report as those from whom a written
promise had been required to place no new loans, incur no
iv FOKEIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
new obligations nor deal with any new customer in Massa-
chusetts until their condition should again become satisfac-
tory. Two of these since that time have gone into the hands
of receivers, — the American Security and Trust Company,
Sioux City, la., and the Leeds Improvement and Land Com-
pany, Sioux City, la. ; and the third, the Investment Trust
Company of America, Topeka, Kan., after conmiunication
from me, as hereinafter stated, did not apply for a license
when its old one expired.
The Debenture Investment Company, Dubuque, la , had
its license revoked and is now in the hands of a receiver.
Of the other five companies, three withdrew from this
State on account of the excessive burden of taxation laid
upon them under the present law.
One company, the Northern Investment Company, Lex-
ington, Ky., not included in last year's report, has been
under the supervision of the office this year ; and another,
the Boston Investment Company, has been requested by the
commissioner to comply with the requirements of the law ;
but, acting under the advice of legal counsel, it has refused
to apply for a license, claiming that it is not subject to the
provisions of the existing law. This matter has been re-
ferred to the Attorney-General for proper action.
The returns, duly sworn to, of the fifteen companies now
doing business here, together with comparative statements
of their several assets and liabilities and of the business done,
in Massachusetts by all companies during any part of the
year ending July 1, 1894, are appended to this report.
In accordance with chapter 303 of the Acts of 1893,
licenses have been granted to these fifteen companies to do
business in Massachusetts for one year from July 1, 1894.
The following comparison is made between the returns for
the years 1894 and 1893 of the fourteen companies doing
business here during both years : —
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. v
First mortgage loans, .... 116,429,989 60 116,754,207 78
Second mortgage loans, . 434,806 06 449,626 16
Tax sale certificates, .... 111,520 02 90,165 56
Stocks and bonds, 886,778 85 463,487 38
Real estate acquired by foreclosure,
including expense, .... 2,288,799 71 1,902,627 65
Amount of interest in default more
than sixty days, 237,676 56 198,873 50
Cash (on band and in bank), . . 463,334 25 378,056 95
Capital paid in, 6,793,663 00 6,312,400 00
Surplus and undiyided proOts, . . 1,187,525 06 1,058,056 72
Debentures outstanding, . . 14,607,744 33 14,737,706 18
In the foregoing table I would call special attention to
the item of ** stock and bonds." The total of all the stocks
and bonds held by all the companies doing business here the
present year (which inclades one which was not in last
year) is $571,033.35, which is very significant as compared
with the total of $2,008,945.71 of last year, and doubly
significant as compared with the total of $9,869,999.94 for
the year 1892 ; thus going far to prove that the companies
which have been most successful and which have succeeded
in weathering the storms of the past have been those which
confined themselves the most closely to the strict mortgage
business, and that the companies which have failed have
owed their fiiilure in no small degree to their investments
outside of mortgage securities, which, as I said in my report
of a year ago, are often of the most speculative character.
In the case of but one company were formal complaints
made to the commissioner during the year. This was the
Investment Trust Company of America, formerly the Kansas
Investment Company, referred to above as one of the three
companies which over a year ago gave promise to do no more
new business in this Commonwealth until specially allowed
to do so. During last winter many individual complaints
were made to me in regard to this company, and finally it
vi FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
seemed best to have an informal hearing, at which the com-
plainants could state to the officers oT the company, who were
present, their respective charges. The company was then
allowed a month to answer these charges, and, as the answers
were not entirely complete or satisfactory, and as the year
for which their license had been granted had closed, on the
sixth day of July, 1894, I thought it best to notify the com-
pany that for the ensuing year, commencing July 1, 1894,
no license should be issued to it; and it accordingly made no
application for a license, and has done no business here since
that time beyond the necessary and proper payments of its
past obligations.
The Debenture Investment Company, organized under the
laws of Iowa, but having its only place of business in Boston
and carrying on its real estate transactions in this vicinity,
went into the hands of a receiver in the month of December,
its officers having previously fled to escape punishment for
their criminal transactions. This company had been doing
active business about eighteen months, and it had had but
one formal examination by the commissioner, about a year
previous to the failure. The failure came just before the
time when a second examination should have been made, but
no official examination could have prevented it entirely.
Under the rule of the law establishing this office, I had
started west on the annual tour of examination September
14, and nothing had occurred to excite my suspicion as to
the soundness of this company until the arrest of its presi-
dent ten weeks later and before my return to the office.
In my report of last year in regard to the Lombard Invest-
ment Company I recommended holders of mortgages not to
follow the advice of the receivers as to the management of
their affairs and entrust the care of their mortgages to the
Concordia Company, but to look after their mortgages them-
selves, or through their own private agents. That advice I
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 42. vii
have felt inclined to repeat more strongly than ever through-
out this present year, and have done so to the many people
who have asked me in regard to it. A very large part of my
time during the first three or four months of 1894 was occu-
pied in answering the personal and written inquiries of the
many Massachusetts investors in this and in one or two other
failed companies.
Under the provisions of the existing law, the fifteen com-
panies now doing business in this State are called upon to
pay the entire expense of this office. This expense was a
heavy burden upon the twenty-three companies which were
here last year. It has now become so heavy a burden upon
the fifteen remaining that unless some change is made in the
law these companies will be forced to give up active business
here entirely, thus causing the office to die through inanition.
I therefore respectfully recommend to the Legislature that,
if it is thought best to continue this office and exercise super-
vision over these companies, the law be changed so that the
State will assume some part of this burden. It seems all
the more equitable for the State to pay a certain part of
the expense, when it is considered that a large part of the
commissioner's time and labor is expended in giving advice
to inhabitants of the State whose money has been invested
in the companies which have previously failed. It is unfair
to make the companies still existing pay the expense of look-
ing after those which have ceased to do business here, and
also to submit them to the uncertainty of not knowing how
much they may be called upon to pay each year until that
year is ended. A definite annual license fee of fifty or one
hundred dollars on each company is as much, in my opinion,
as they should be called upon to pay.
Inasmuch as a change in the existing law in some way or
another is an absolute necessity, and as the question of
entirely abolishing the office has been more or less under
vili FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
consideration for some time, it is proper to give here a brief
history of the office and of the work which has been done in
it. The office was established nearly six years ago, at a
time when the investments of the people of this Common-
wealth in Western mortgages amounted to ten or twelve
million dollars annually. ^ At the start some seventy-five
foreign corporations were engaged in the business in this
State, and in all one hundred and eleven corporations have
been under the supervision of the office during its existence
up to date. Of these one hundred and eleven corporations,
twenty-four are to my knowledge still carrying on business.
Four or five others may be still in active existence, but I
have not been able to ascertain definitely about them. One
company while in good condition gave up business on account
of the hostile legislation of the State of Kansas. The remainder
have failed, and are either wound up entirely or are dragging
along in the slow process of settlement and liquidation. Dur-
ing the two and a half years, however, that I have held this
office, but two companies have failed while they were legally
doing business here under the commissioner's direction. One
of these has since reorganized, and is continuing business
under a new form, the other being the Debenture Invest-
ment Company above referred to. There are, besides the
companies above enumerated, quite a number of Western
mortgage companies still solvent and actively engaged in
business that have never entered the State of Massachusetts.
The business distress which has prevailed throughout the
entire country for the past few years is responsible in part
for some of these failures, as it has uncovered weak places
which would not otherwise have been brought to light.
Another agency in bringing about failures was the mistaken
notion that the high plains of western Kansas and Nebraska
and eastern Colorado would prove to be as susceptible to
cultivation as similar land lying a little further to the east-
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. ix
ward and at a lower altitude. This can perhaps be called an •
honest business mistake. Another leading cause of failure
has been the sudden rise and subsequent collapse of real
estate values in the larger towns and cities west of the Mis-
sissippi. In many of these towns there was for years a
rapid increase in real estate values, and mortgage indebted-
ness was incurred which, seeming proper at the time, was
found to be altogether in excess of the values which could
be realized when it was found out too late that these
cities had been over-built and over-valued. It is not always
realized in the East that the value of real estate in the newer
Western cities can sometimes be made to rise and &I1 with
the same ease and rapidity as that of railroad stocks and
other securities. The most important element, however, of
all in bringing disaster to the Eastern investors in these
companies has been, in my opinion, a reckless management
or mismanagement of the affairs of many of the companies,
and their large investments in enterprises of a speculative
natare which had no legitimate connection with the mort-
gage business, and of the character of which in many cases
the investor was ignorant. It is, as I have said before, a
noteworthy fact that the sound companies still in existence
are those which have confined themselves most exclusively
to loans upon farms or to prudent loans upon city real
estate ; and the character of the business itself ought not to
suffer discredit, even if the majority of those engaged in it
have been either ignorant or unscrupulous in their business
management.
Supervision has been exercised over these many companies
by the states of Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut and
New York, each looking after those companies doing busi-
ness within its own borders. The nature of this supervision
was originally in all these States an examination and audit-
ing of the books of the various companies, not investigating
X FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
• the actual values of securities except in so far as was shown
by the books themselves. While such a supervision has
undoubtedly been of some value, expeiience has shown that
something more was needed, and that little reliance could
be placed upon the result of an examination that did not
look to the real value of the land upon which mortgage
securities were issued. In addition to this, a search of
records at registries of deeds with the abstracts of title there
to be obtained has been of great value, and has been neces-
sary in showing up cases of fraudulent dealing, where it had
been designed to conceal the name of the company or person
who had really obtained the money loaned on the mortgage.
It can readily be. seen that it is impossible to make such an
examination perfect, for it would more than take the entire
time of one man to pass upon all the securities of any one
of the larger companies. An examination, therefore, of
certain sample mortgages picked out at random, a knowledge
of the business habits and reputation of the officers of a
company and a careful scrutiny into the nature of all securi-
ties other than direct mortgages, have been the means I
have found it best to rely upon in forming an opinion as to
the soundness and safety of each company. It has of course
been my custom to institute a more thorough investigation
in all those cases where any suspicious circumstances have
been discovered.
I believe that a supervision of these companies as at
present exercised is of value to such people of this Common-
wealth as are unable to attend to the investment or care of
their own property, not so much to-day in regard to the
companies now doing business here as in the power of the
office to prevent improper or fraudulent concerns from
entering the State in the future. There is, however, it
seems to me, no strong reason for the existence of such
supervision over these companies more than over a great
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. xi
many other corporations organized under the laws of other
States, and in which Massachusetts people have for years
invested much of their money.
Eespectfully submitted,
JAMES RUSSELL REED,
i
Commissioner of Foreign Mortgage Corporations.
RETURNS
or
FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS.
FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
THE W. C. BELCHER LAIO) MORTGAGE COMPANY^
Fort Worth, Texas.
F. S. Bblcueb, Prendent, Charlotte, Mich.
N. Harding, Vice-President^ Fort Worth, Texas.
H. H. Cobb, SecrHary^ Fort Worth, Texas.
L. D. Cobb, Treaeurer, Fort Worth, Texas.
[Sbptembeb 29, 1894.]
Assets,
Loans secared by first liens on real estate, $261,921 65
Loans secnred bj second liens on real estate, 65,642 15
Loans on collateral secnrity, 2,177 98
Tax sale certificates, 553 25
Real estate acqaired by foreclosure, 33,147 06
Premlams paid, 10,000 00
Furniture and fixtures, 1,132 76
Current expenses, 10,039 03
Past due interest matured within 60 days 1,230 16
Other past due interest, 10,960 58
Due from sundry persons, 1,968 60
Due fl'om banks and bankers, 16,119 52
Other assets, viz. : —
Commissions paid, 1,865 85
Accrued interest not due on loans on hand and with trustees as collat-
eral for debentures, 11,573 83
Live stock, 550 00
Bond with State Treasurer of Vermont • • 1,000 00
Total, $419,882 41
Liabilitiee.
Capital stock paid in, $83,363 00
UndiTided profits, . . . • 48,600 68
Bills payable, 25,500 00
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 223,614 00
Interest paid in advance by borrowers, 2,145 04
Certificates of deposits bearing interest, . ) ^ ^ 27^335 69
Deposits awaiting investment, . . .J
Other liabilities, via. : —
Due sundry persons, 1,639 17
Deposits by borrowers to pay principal at maturity, .... 1,203 59
Debenture coupons outstanding, 1,470 75
Due borrowers on uncompleted loans, 700 00
Accrued interest (not due) on debenture bonds outstanding, . • . 4,310 49
Total,. • $419,882 41
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
When organized : Janaarj, 1885. Under what State laws : Texa«.
Principal place of business : Fort Worth, Texas.
Anthorized amount of capital stock, .......
Amount of capital subscribed,
What part of the capital stock Is paid in cash ? $83,363.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in,
How much of its capital stock Is owned by officers of the company ?
$131,800.
How much, If any, of the stock owned by its officers Is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past Ave years : 7^ per cent, on paid-up capital,
January, 1893, and Jan. 1, 1894. Prior to this all earnings were
applied in paying up capital stock.
Do you cause a personal examination of offered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
influences ? Yes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : Bell, Williamson, Falls, Travis, Tarrant, Johnson,
Wilbarger, Montague, Baylor, Parker, Comanche, Hood, McLennon,
Hays, Bastrop and other counties.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six months or
more in arrears : 42 mortgages, amounting to $68,781.64. Several of
these have only small balances due, most of the interest having been
paid.
Total amount loaned to date,
Total amounts of loans paid,
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years, . . 146
Total amount of loans unpaid, { Gn»™°t«ed andsold, . . .
I Owned by company.
Total amount in process of foreclosure : None.
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
Total amount of debentures certified,
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement, ....
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : First National Bank, Charlotte, Mich., trustees, series A,
B, C; Fidelity Loan and Trust Company, Detroit, Mich., trustees,
series D.
SCHBDULE B.
Statement of Debenture Bonde Certified to by Trustees,
$300,000 00
205,500 00
122.137 00
1,667,017 25
747,056 59
174,525 31
667,039 01
262,921 65
223,614 00
223,614 00
Bate
per
Cent.
Year WHBii
Secured by
Pledge of Fint
Mortgage Loans
SERIES.
Dated
Due.
Redeem-
able.
Amount of
Debentures.
A, .
b' '
c'
I'
7
6 and 7
6 and 7
6 and 7
6 and 7
6 and 7
6 and 7
6 and 7
6
1889
1890
1890
1891
1892
1893
1893
1894
1891
1899
1900
1900
1901
1902
1903
1903
1904
1901
1894)
1895}
18951
1896.
1897 f'
1898 J
1898)
1899}
1895
$101,961 04
100,407 05
24,409 66
11,920 00
$94,710 00
94,904 00
22,700 00
11,300 00
$238,697 66
$223,614 00
4 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
Statb of Tbxab.
CouMTT OF Tabrakt, 88. I, HoHioe H. Cobb, Secretaiy of the aforesaid com-
pany, do Bolemnly swear that the foregoing statement Is tme, to the beet of my
knowledge and belief. Horacb H. Cobb.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this third day of October, 18M.
Wm. D. Williams, Notary PtMie,
Tarrant County, Textu.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
FABMLAira) SECURITY COMPANY,
Sioux City, la.
Elbeidob a. Kingman, President, West Newton, Mass.
Warrbn G. Folbt, Viee-PrestderU^ Botton, Mass.
Wk. W. Lowe, Treaturer, Cliftondale, Mass.
[OOTOBBB 1, 1894.]
Assets.
Loans secured by first liens on real estate, $90,000 00
Real estate acquired by foreclosure and otherwise, .... 82,400 00
Expenses on account of foreclosure and titles, 1,942 92
Past due interest, about 21,340 00
Total, $145,682 92
Liabilities,
Capital stock paid in, $3,000 00
Surplus fund, \
Guaranty fund, [ 84,&98 02
UndiTided profits, J
Bills payable 14,700 00
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 32,600 00
Other liabilities, yis. : —
Due sundry persons, 3,776 63
Due W. W. Lowe, 1,688 27
One claim in dispute, 420 00
Unpaid taxes (estimated), 5,000 00
Total, $145,682 92
When organised : 1891. Under what State U&ws : Iowa.
Principal place of business : Boston, Mass.
Authorized amount of capital $100,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 3,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? $3,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
How much of its capital stock is owned by ofllcers of the company ?
$1,600.
How much, if any, of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral:
None.
Rates of diyidends for past five years : Organized in 1891.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : Kansas.
Is the company subject to examination by local state officers ? No.
FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
Total amount of debentares certified
Less amoant on hand and with agents : None.
Total liabilitj for debenture bonds as per statement
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : Howard National Bank, Boston.
SCHEDCLE B.
Statement of Debenture Bonds Certified to hy Trustees.
$32,500 00
32,600 OO
Ykak wbbk
Rate
1
Secnred by
1
Amonnt of
per
1
Fledge of First
Debentures.
Cent.
Dated.
Dne.
Mortyace Loans.
»
1892
1895
$4,000 00
$2.000 00
1892
1895
3,600 00
1,800 00
1892
1895
2,000 00
1,000 00
•
1892
1895
4,400 00
2,200 00
1892
1895
4,000 00
2,000 00
1892
1895
3,000 00
1,500 OU
1892
1895
700 00
850 00
1892
1895
2,000 00
1,000 00
1892
1895
1,200 00
600 00
1892
1895
4,000 00
2,000 00
1892
1895
2,000 00
1,000 00
1892
1895
2,000 00
1,000 00
1892
1895
1,000 00
5UO00
1892
1895
1,600 00
800 00
1892
1895
1,000 00
500 00
Series, .
1892
1895
1,000 00
500 00
1892
1895
600 00
300 00
1892
1895
1,200 00
600 00
1892
1895
1,300 00
650 00
1892
1895
5,000 00
2,500 00
1892
1895
1,200 00
600 00
1892
1895
5,000 00
2,500 00
1892
1895
2,000 00
1,000 00
1892
1895
200 00
100 00
1892
1895
1,200 00
6U0 00
1892
1895
400 00
200 00
1893
1896
2,000 00
1.000 00
1893
1896
2,000 00
1,000 00
1893
1896
1.000 00
500 00
1893
1896
1,400 00
700 00
k
1893
1896
3,000 00
1,500 00
1 $65,000 oa
$32,500 00
State of Massachusetts.
County op Suffolk, ss. I, Wm. W. Lowe, Treasurer of the aforesaid com-
pany, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the beet of my
knowledge and belief. Wm. W. Lowe, Treasurer.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this fourth day of October, 1894.
William M. Nassau, Justice of the Peace.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
THE INTEB-STATE MORTGAGE THUST COMPANY,
Parsons, Kan., and Greenfield, Mass.
Jbroxb B. Brown, PresiderUf ParsonSiKan.
luA F. Adam8» Secretary and Treasurer, ParBons, Kan.
F. M. Thompson, Vice-President, OreenfleId» Mass.
W. N. Snow, Cttshter, Oreenfleld, Mass.
[October 1, 1894.]
Assets.
Loans secured by first liens on real estate, $1,150 00
Loans secored by second liens on real estate, 10,784 54
Loans on collateral security, ) 8 113 34
Loans on personal security, i *
Tax sale certificates 429 33
Stocks and bonds (see Schedule A) 1,000 00
Real estate purchased, ) ^ .n gs? 09
Real estate acquired by foreclosure, i '
Premiums paid, 9,000 00
Furniture and fixtures, records and vault, 2,331 46
Current expenses, 7,343 97
Past due interest matured within 60 days, 2d3 25
Other past due interest, 227 75
Past due loan* remitted for, 1,350 00
Due from sundry persons, 4,005 98
Due from banks and bankers, 135 26
Cash in office, 216 34
Other assets, viz. : —
Due from eastern office, 29,379 80
Grain account, 228 94
Loans in process of foreclosure, 3,556 03
Treasury stock, 5,500 00
Total $127,903 08
Liabilities,
Capital stock paid in, $100,000 00
Surplus fund, \
Guaranty fund, |> 14,461 42
Undivided profits, /
Dividends unpaid, 30 00
Interest paid in advance by borrowers, 1,614 43
Due borrowers on loans in process of completion, 6,397 00
Deposiu awaiting investment, 2,800 00
Other deposits, 2,540 23
Due to branch offices and agents, 260 00
Other liabilities, vis : —
Paid on loans before maturity, 800 00
Total $127,903 08
8 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
When organized : 1888. Under what State laws : Kansas.
Principal place of business : Parsons, Kan., and Greenfield, Mass.
Authorized amount of capital,
Amount of capital subscribed,
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? $100,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : Amount equal to stock
owned.
How much of its capital stodE is owned by officers of the company ?
$29,200.
How much, if any, of the stock owned by its officers Is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past flye years : Average 5 per cent.
Do you cause a personal examination of oflfered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free iW>m local
influences ? Yes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : South-eastern Kansas ~ Labette, Neosho, Crawford,
Cherokee, Montgomery, Wilson, Allen and Lyon counties, and Ca-
nadian County, Oklahoma.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six montha
or more in arrears : None.
Total amount loaned to date, ....••••.
Total amount of loans paid about
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years, . about
{Guaranteed and sold, . about
Unguaranteed and sold, ?
Owned by company, >
Total amount in process of foreclosure, ... . .
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
9100,000 00
100,000 00
about
1,080,990 00
317,000 00
15,000 00
644,000 00
70,090 00
8^06 00
SCHBDVLB A.
Description of Stoekt €ind Bonds,
DESCRIPTION.
Par Yalae.
BookYalM.
Capital stock of the El Reno Water Company,
$10,000 00
f 1,000 00
Statb or Kansas.
County of Labette, ss. I, Ira F. Adams, Treasurer of the aforesaid company,
do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my knowledge
and belief. Ira F. Adams.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this third day of November, 1894.
J. WxLLABO Walkbk, NoUuy FMie.
HLj commission expires Feb. 17, 1898.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
IOWA LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY,
Des Moines, Iowa.
John M. Dwbns, President, Dee Moines, la.
D. F. Witter, Vice- President, DeB MolneSi la.
W. B. Coffin, TVecuurer, Des Moines, la.
J. H. Bl^ik, Secretary, Des Moines, la.
[NOTBMBBH 19, 1894.]
Assets.
Loans secured by first liens on real estate, $4,162,035 06
Loans on collateral security, 18,501 77
Loans on personal secarity, 2,997 50
Tax sale certificates, 12,961 83
Stocks and bonds (see Schedule A), 4,400 40
Ofllce building . 185,000 00
Real estate acquired by foreclosure, 154,074 39
Expenses on account of foreclosure, 194 36
Due from sundry persons, 10,390 67
Due from banks and bankers, 70,746 06
Cash in office 4,124 42
Other assets, tIi. : —
Mortgage interest due 43,302 03
Sherifl*s' sale certificates, 23,627 47
Land contracts, 74,820 87
Total, f 4,717,176 73
Liabilities,
Capital stock paid in, 9500,000 00
Surplus fUnd 100,000 00
UndlTided profits 214,981 08
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B) 3,723,700 00
Certificates of deposits bearing interest, . . 141,398 35
Other deposiU, 14,180 88
Due to banks and bankers, 843 17
Other liabilities, ylz. : —
Debenture coupons due but not presented for payment, . . • 22,073 25
Total $4,717,176 73
When organized : 1872. Under what State laws : Iowa.
Principal place of business : Des Moines, Iowa.
Authorized amount of capital, $500,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed 500,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? $500,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
10 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
How mach of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
$81,100.
How much, if any, of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? $4,000.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral, . $9,800 00
Rates of dlyidends for past fl^e years : Four per cent semi-annually.
Do you cause a personal examination of offered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
influences ? Tes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties: Iowa, Eastern Nebraska and Southeastern part of
South Dakota.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six months or
more in arrears, 102 115,321 00
Total amount loaned on real estate to date 19,824,111 00
Total amounts ofloans on real estate paid, 15,662,075 94
{Guaranteed and sold : None.
Unguaranteed and sold : None.
Owned by company, .... •4,162,035 06
Total amount in process of foreclosure, 34,200 00
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
Total amount of debentures certified, 3,789,800 00
Less amount on hand and with agents, 66,100 00
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement 3,723,700 00
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : Ira Cook, C. A. Dudley, O. M. Hippee.
Schedule A.
Description of Stocks and Bonds,
DESCBIPTION.
Par Valae.
Market
Yaloe.
Book Yalae.
48 shares Western White Bronze Company
of Des Moines, la ,
Assessment certittcates of city of Des Moines,
la
Iowa school warrants,
City of Des Moines warrants, . . >
$4,800 00
679 18
1,176 87
144 35
$2,400 00
679 18
1,176 87
144 35
$2,400 00
679 18
1,176 87
144 35
$6,800 40
$4,400 40
$4,400 40
Schedule B.
Statement of Debenture Bonds Certijied to by Trustees,
Rate
per
Cent.
Tbai when
Seeared by
Pledge of First
Mortgage Loans.
SERIES.
Dated.
Dae.
Redeem-
able.
Amoant of
Debentures.
W, . . .
25, . . .
26, . . .
27, . . .
28, . . .
6
6
6
6
6
1884
1884
1885
1885
1885
1894
1895
1895
1895
1895
1889
1890
1890
1890
1890
$600 00
7,126 00
3,000 00
106,915 00
6,600 00
$500 00
5,100 00
2,800 00
100,000 00
6,100 00
* On real estate.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
11
Statement of Debenture Bondt Certified to by Trustees — Concluded.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
»4,
3d.
36.
37,
88,
39,
40,
41,
42,
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48,
49,
50,
62.
63,
64,
5o,
66.
67.
58,
5».
60.
61,
1.
2,
3.
4.
6,
6.
7.
»,
9.
10,
A,
B,
S'
CC,
SERIES.
Rata
per
Cent.
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
5i
&J
5;
6j
6^
63
5j
61
6]
63
63
5J
51
63
63
5^
6
5
5
6
6
5
6
6
5
5
5
5
5
Ybar whbh
Dated.
Dne.
Redeem-
able.
1885
1885
1885
1885
1885
1885
1886
1887
1887
1K88
1888
1888
1888
1889
1889
1889
1889
1890
1890
1890
1891
1891
1892
1892
1892
1892
1892
1893
1&93
1894
1894
1894
1894
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1887
1892
1893
1887
1892
1893
1893
1895
1895
1896
1895
1896
1896
1896
1897
1898
1898
1898
1898
1899
1899
1899
1899
1899
1900
1900
1900
1901
1901
1902
1902
1902
1902
1902
1903
1903
1904
1904
1904
1905
1901
1901
1901
1901
1901
1901
1901
1902
1907
1908
1902
1907
1908
1903
1890
1888
1890
1888
1891
1891
1891
1894
1893
1893
1893
1893
1894
1894
1894
1894
1896
1895
1895
1895
1896
1896
1897
1897
1897
1897
1897
1898
1898
1899
1899
1899
1900
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1897
1902
1903
1897
1902
1903
1898
Secnred by
Pledge of First
Mortgage Loans.
Amoont of
Debentoret.
86,076 00
102,794 00
107,433 00
106,650 00
66,804 25
105,662 00
26,656 00
105.925 00
106,430 00
105,660 00
103.479 00
107,061 00
110,367 00
106.398 00
105.774 00
105.590 00
101,561 00
100,890 00
108,942 00
109,867 60
76,636 80
55,400 00
108,772 00
106,850 00
112,610 00
106,846 00
ia7,000 00
I08,:i60 00
106.775 00
105,750 06
110,1*25 00
105,700 00
56,900 00
108,945 00
107,437 00
106,285 00
106,812 00
106,772 00
10S,*299 85
74,935 00
43.725 00
5,250 00
7.300 00
20,025 00
550 00
1.100 00
226 00
$4,086,636 40
$3,300 00
97,000 00
99.500 00
100,000 00
60,000 00
100,000 00
24,000 00
10(<,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
96,500 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
lOtf.OOO 00
94,500 00
96,0PO 00
100,000 00
99,400 00
70,900 00
52,(i00 00
100,000 00
100.000 00
100,000 00
100.000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
41,500 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100.000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
99,000 00
70,000 00
41,000 00
5,000 00
6.000 00
19,000 00
600 00
1,000 00
200 00
$3,789,800 00
State of Iowa.
County of Polk, sb. I, D F. Witter. Vice-President of the aforesaid aimpanj.
do aolemnly swear that the foregoing statement is trae. to tbe best of my knowledge
and belief. D. F. Witter, Vice-PresideiU.
Sobscribed and sworn to before me this twenty-slxth day of November, 1894.
E. 0. Burt, Notary Public.
12 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
\
MASSACHUSETTS BEAL ESTATE COMPAinr,
Augusta, Me.
Po&TB W. HfiWiifS, President, Tannton, Mass.
Pabkb W. HBWiifS, Viee-Preeident, Taunton, Maif.
[Sbptembbr 80, 1894.]
AseeiB,
Loans secared by second liens on real estate, $34,074 96
Stocks and bonds (see Scbedale A), 1,100 00
Real estate purchased 2,088,653 41
Premiams paid on stocks and bonds, 94 97
Fnmitnre and fixtures, 2,255 50
Current expenses, 6,487 48
Past dae interest, 6,414 59
Due from sundry persons 40,898 96
Due from banks and bankers, 16,379 02
Total, 12,746,358 89
Liabilitiee.
Capital stock paid in, f 2,000,000 00
Surplus ftind 26,117 26
Dividends unpaid, 2,846 01
Other liabilities, tIs. : —
Mortgages, 714,000 00
Accounts, 2,395 62
Total, 92,745,358 89
When organized : December, 1885. Under what State laws : Maine*
Principal place of business : Augusta, Me.
Authorised amount of capital f 2,000,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 2,000,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? f 2,000,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
f53,000.
Uow much, if any of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
j company as collateral ? None.
I Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
' None.
Rates of dlTldends for past fi?e years : 5 per cent, for 4i years ; 1 extra
of 7 per cent. Last dividend paid, 7 per cent, per annum.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. 13
Do yon cause a personal examination of oflbred secarity to be made hj
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
Inflnenoes ? Tes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : Boston, Suffolk County, Mass.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six months or
more in arrears, I f28,414 29
Total amount loaned to date, 124,741 63
Total amounts of loans paid, 90,666 67
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years : None.
{Guaranteed and sold : None.
Unguaranteed and sold : None.
Owned by company 34,074 96
Total amount in process of foreclosure, 28,414 29
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
SCHEDT».B A.
Description of St ckt and Bonds,
DESCBIPTIOSr.
ParVftlDtt.
Book Yftlue.
City of Boston water bond, 1910
United States government 4 per cent., 1907, .
f 1,000 00
100 00
f 1,067 36
127 61
f 1,100 00
f 1,194 97
State of Massacrvsettb.
CorNTT OF Suffolk, ss. I, Porte W. Hewins, Treasurer of the aforesaid com-
pany, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my
knowledge and belief. Porte W. Hewins, Treantrer.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this twenty-seventh day of October, 1894.
Milton L. Daggett, Notary Public.
14 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS- [Jan.
THE MINNESOTA LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY,
Minneapolis, Minn.
E. A. Merrill, PreaiderU.
Gro. a. Pillsbvrt, Vice-PretiderU,
£. J. Phelps, 2d Vice-President,
F. M. Prince, Secretary and Treaturer.
H. H. Coleman, Assistant Secretary,
[October 1, 1894.]
Assets.
Loans secured by first Hens on real estate $177,316 18
Loans secured by second liens on real estate 8,094 11
Loans on collateral security 366,068 50
Loans on personal security, •...•.... 136,275 09
Stocks and bonds (see Schedule A), 30,060 18
Office building, 296,890 54
Real estate acquired by foreclosure and settlements, .... 96,406 43
Expenses on account of foreclosure, 609 57
Due from sundry persons 17,503 25
Due from banks and bankers . 204,003 77
Cash in office, 11,843 03
Other assets, viz. : —
Loans secured by first mortgage on real estate with State auditor, • 100,650 00
Total f 1,446,220 65
Liabilities.
Capital stock paid in, $500,000 OO
Surplus fund, 100,000 OO
Undivided profits 54,410 81
Due borrowers on loans in process of completion, 10,806 06
Certificates of deposits bearing interest 849,904 86
Deposits awaiting inyestment, 55,154 87
Other deposits, 875,914 05
Total $1,446,220 65
When organized : 1883. Under what State laws : Minnesota.
Principal place of business : Minneapolis.
Authorized amount of capital, $2,000,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 500,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? $500,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : $500,000.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
$99/)00.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. 15
How moch, if any, of the stock owned by its officers 1b pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past five years : 1889-90, 6 per cent, semi-annu-
ally ; 1891 and 1892, 4 per cent, semi-annually ; 1893, one dividend of
4 per cent. ; second dividend passed 1894, 2} per cent, semi-annually
paid.
Bo you cause a personal examination of offered security to be made
by salaried employees of the company who are entirely flree from
local influences ? Yes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth, and some on farms
in Minnesota.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six months or
more in arrears, 6 f 13,992 00
Total amount loaned to date, 42,923,086 90
Total amounts of loans paid, 33,896,996 90
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years : May, 1892,
to May, 1894 1,962,079 00
{Guaranteed and sold : None.
Unguaranteed and sold,.$8,237,l87 12 ) 9 028 091 qo
Owned by company, . 788,903 88 ) ' '
Total amount in process of foreclosure (for clients and ourselves), • 117,600 00
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? Tes.
SOHEDVLB A.
Description of Stocks and Bonds.
DRSCUIPTIOM.
Par Value.
Market
Value.
Book Value.
City of. River Falls Wise water works bonds,
City of Duluth, Minn., local improvement
certiBcates,
The Minnesota Loan and Trust Company,
79Bluure8,
f 22,000 00
295 18
7,900 00
922,00000
295 18
7,900 00
f 22,000 00
295 18
7,766 00
130,060 18
State of Minnesota.
CoiKiT or Hekkepik, ss. I, Eugene A. Merrill, Piesident of the aforesaid
company, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my
knowledge and belief. Eugene A. Mbbrill.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this tenth day of October, 1894.
M. E. OoETziNOEB, Notary PubliCf
Hennepin County, Minn.
16 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
NEBBASKA LOAK AND TRUST COMPANY,
Hastings, Neb.
Jambs N. Cla&kb, Preiid«nt.
D. L. McEl Hinnet. VUe^PruiderU,
Edwin C. Wbbsteb, Treawrer.
Cha&lbs p. Wbbstbr, Cashier*
[OCTOBBE 1, 1894.]
A9$€t9.
Loans secared by first liens on real estate $1,939,477 24
Loans secured by second liens on real estate (discounted to tbeir pres-
ent wortb), 169,464 58
Loans on collateral security, 8,256 58
Loans on personal security, 2,033 98
Tax sale certificates, 24,818 97
Office building, 85,000 00
Other real estate purchased (brick business blocks in Hastings), . . 28,101 64
Real estate acquired by foreclosure, 179,294 84
Expenses on account of foreclosure, indnding bonds and coupons in
hands of attorney 87,412 33
Furniture and fixtures, 5,168 15
Past due interest matured within 60 days, 11,029 08
Other past due interest 85,318 92
Cash in office and sight exchange 15,043 09
Other assets, viz. : —
Completed first mortgage loans in hands of brokers for sale, . • . 69,440 69
Debenture bonds in hands of brokers for sale, 10,300 00
Accrued interest not due on outstanding debenture bonds, . . . 39,766 87
Total $2,694,916 92
LiabilitUt,
Capital stock paid in, $500,000 00
Guaranty fund 136,468 00
Undivided profits, 20,676 40
Bills payable, 40,000 00
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 1,912,600 00
Interest paid awaiting presentation of coupons 8,576 94
Deposits awaiting Investment, 49,338 39
Other deposits awaiting Instructions, 687 94
Other liabilities, yiz. : —
OuUtandlng debenture coupon . 6,869 25
Interest accrued (not due) on outstanding debentures, .... 20,800 00
Total, $2,691,916 92
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
17
When organized : May 1, 1882. Under what State laws : Nebraska.
Principal place of business : Hastings, Neb.
Anthorized amount of capital, $1,000,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 500,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? $500,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
$37,000.
How much, if any, of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as cnllateral ? $1,000.
Total amount of itb capital btock held by the company as collateral :
$4,000.
Rates of dividends for past five years : None.
Bo yon cause a personal examination of offered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
influences ? Yes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : Central and southern Nebraska.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six ) *640 342,975 00
months or more in arrears, J t93 92,400 00
Total amount loaned to date, 10,493,395 00
Total amounts of loans paid, 6,970,477 11
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years (by agree-
ment, all back interest paid), 112 86,630 00
(Guaranteed and sold, . . . 1,514,000 00
Unguaranteed and sold : None.
Owned by company, .... 2,008,917 89
Total amount in process of foreclosure, 87,412 33
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
Total amount of debentures certified, 1,912,600 00
Less amount on hand and with agents, 10,300 00
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement 1,902,300 00
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : W. F. Ringland, C. B. Button, W. M. Lowman.
SCHEDVLB B.
StaiemerU of Dehentvre Bonds Certified to by Trustees.
Rate
per
C«nt.
Ykah when
Secured by
Pledge of rint
Mortgage Loans.
SERIES.
Dated.
Due.
Redeem-
able.
Amoant of
Debentarei.
1:
4. .
a': :
8, .
9, .
10, .
H. .
12, .
13. .
H. .
15. .
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1886
1887
1887
1887
1887
1887
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1899
1899
1899
1899
1899
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1896
1897
1897
1897
1897
1897
! $96,060 00
100 073 00
98,036 00
99,563 50
100,180 00
100,050 00
100,526 80
100,500 00
100,040 00
100,190 00
98,050 00
100,090 00
100,039 44
100,463 00
$96,000 00
100,000 00
98,000 00
99,500 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
98,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
100,000 00
* On buaioeM prior to Aug. 1, 1800.
t On bualnoaa from Aug. 1, 1800.
18 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
Statement of Debenture Bonds Certified to hy Trustees — Conclnded<
Bate
per
Cent
Tkar wbbs
Secnred by
Pledge of First
Mortgage Loan*.
SERIES.
Dated.
Doe.
Redeem-
able.
Amount of
Debentures.
16, • . .
17, . a .
18, • • .
1«7, • • •
20, a a .
21, . . .
22, . a .
24, a . a
6
6
6
6
6
6
6i
6
1887
1887
1888
1888
1890
(1891
1893
(1892
1893
1894
1899
1901
1900
1896
1897
1898)
1900
1899
1900
1901
1897
1901
1898
1894
1895
1896
1897
1899
f 100,053 00
10.400 00
62,950 00
100,332 60
98,875 00
96,760 00
23,100 00
31,940 00
f 100,000 00
10.000 00
62.800 00
100,000 00
98,500 00
96,400 00
21.700 00
31,700 00
$1,918,272 24
f 1,912,600 00
State ov Nbbrabka.
County of Adam b, 88a I, Edwin Ca Webster, Treaaurer of the aforesaid com-
pany, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is trae, to the best of my
knowledge and belief. E. C. Webster.
Sabscribed and sworn to before me this ninth day of October, 1894a
E. Ba LocKWOOD, Notary Public.
My commission expires Dec. 4, 1896.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. 19
NEW ENGIiAND LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY.
Des MoineSy la.
D. 0. EsuBAVOH, President.
W. W. WiTMER, Vice-President.
W. F. Bartlbtt, Secretary and Treasurer.
[October 1, 18^.]
Assets.
Loans secured by first liens on real estate f 4,483 J47 85
Loans secnred by second liens on real estate 9,606 68
Loans on collateral secarltjr, 330 00
Loans on personal secnritj, 6,796 07
Tax sale certificates, 22,635 91
Stocks and bonds (see Schedule A) 14,72100
Real estate acquired by foreclosnre, 343,85186
Expenses on account of foreclosure,* 38,657 76
Furniture and fixtures, . 8,120 08
Fast due interest matured within 60 days, ) 33 866 16
Other past due interest, . . . . i '
Fast dne loans remitted for, 18,600 00
Due ftx>m branch offices and agents 44,131 62
Cash in office 62,912 48
Other assets, yis. : —
Land contract8,t 33,540 19
Commission notes,! 274,060 20
Total 16,386,467 26
Liabilities.
Capital stock paid in, $760,000 00
Undivided profits, 109,767 24
Bills payable, 146,000 00
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 4,117»627 83
Interest paid in advance by borrowers, 16,261 16
Due borrowers on loans in process of completion, 15,198 14
Deposits awaiting investment, 141,842 96
Other deposits, 76,337 93
Other liabilities, viz. : ~
Treasurer's checks, 4,442 01
Total, $5,386,467 26
* This lodudM oofltB, taxes, interest, and in some cases the principal of loans in fore-
closure,
t Land contracts remaining payments on land sold.
X ConunJssion notes secured by second mortgages.
20 FOEEIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
When organized : 1876. ITnder what State laws : Iowa.
Principal place of bosinesB : New York.
Authorized amonnt of capital f 1,000,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 760,000 00
What part of tbe capital stock is paid in cash ? $760,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
How much of its capital stock Is owned by officers of the company ?
9120,000.
How much. If any, of the stock owned by its officers Is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amonnt of Its capital stock held by the company as collateral, . 500 00
Rates of dividends for past five years : 8 per cent, until Sept. 21, 1894;
then 6 per cent.
Do you cause a personal examination of offered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
influences ? Yes.
State the sections of country In which loans are made, giving tbe prin-
cipal counties: Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Utah, Central
Texas and Oklahoma.
State tbe number and amonnt of mortgages with Interest six months or
more In arrears, 50 123,650 00
Total amount loaned to date, 23,224,108 00
Total amounts of loans paid, 12,498,129 00
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years, . . • 210,009 00
{Guaranteed and sold, . . . 6,846,548 00
Unguaranteed and sold, • . . 395,683 65
Owned by company, .... 4,483,747 86
Total amount In process of foreclosure, 194,525 00
Is tbe company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
Total amount of debentures certified, 4,162,127 83
Less amount on hand and with agents, • • 44,500 00
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement 4,117,627 83
Trustees for debentures (If more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : Farmers* Loan and Trust Company, New York, series 1
to 26, 6 per cent. ; Real Estate Trust Company, Philadelphia, series
A to M, 6 per cent., and series AA, 7 per cent. ; United States Trust
Company, Kansas City, series R, 6|| per cent. ; Home and Colonial
Assets and Debenture Corporation (Limited), Edinburgh, Scotland,
series A, 4^ per cent., and series 1 to 2, 6 per cent.
Schedule A.
Description of Stocks and Bonds.
DESCRIPTION.
Par Valne.
Market
Value.
Book Valoe.
Omaha Title and Trust Company,
Iowa National Bank,
AVestern Investment Company, .
East Side Bank,
Warrants ot Clay Center, Kan., .
f 100 00
1,000 00
1,000 00
2,000 00
10,000 00
f96 00
1,125 00
1,000 00
2,500 00
10,000 00
f96 00
1.126 00
1.000 00
2,600 00
10,000 00
-
-
f 14,721 00
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
21
BCHBDULB B.
Statement of Debenture Bonds Certified to by Trustees,
■
a
V
O
I
s
Ykab week
Seoxtred bt
Pledge of
AMonirr of
SERIES.
1
•
s
■
a .
11
Flrtt
Mortgage
Second
Mortgage
Security.
Debentures.
i
5
s
^ <B
Loans.
Loans.
1.
0
1886
1896
1891
$101,925 00
1
.
$99,000 00
2.
1887
1897
1892
103,850 00
~
•
100.000 00
8,
1887
1897
1892
102,075 00
1
—
100.000 00
4,
1887
1897
1892
102,260 00
.
100,000 00
ft.
1887
1897
1892
102.715 00
.
.
100,000 00
«.
1887
1897
1892
102.010 00
. 1
•
100.000 00
7.
1888
1898
1893
102.145 00
1
.
100,000 00
8.
1888
1898
1893
101.235 00
•
99.000 00
9,
1888
1898
1893
105,025 00
I 1
.
100.000 00
}?• •
1888
1898
1893
102,100 00
-
.
100,000 00
11.
1888
1898
1893
102,060 00
.
.
100,000 00
12.
1888
1898
1893
102,350 00
.
.
99,500 00
13.
1888
1899
1894
102,175 00
-
..
100.000 00
It' •
1889
1899
1894
102,125 00
. 1
«
100.000 00
15,
1889
1899
1894
102,340 00
-
.
100,000 00
16,
1889
1899
1894
102.170 00
•
-
100,000 00
17.
1889
1899
1894
102,238 00
-
•
100.000 00
}l' '
1889
1899
1894
101,650 00
-
.
99,500 00
S' •
1889
1899
1894
103.200 00
1
.
100.000 00
20,
1889
1899
1894
102,200 00
—
100,000 00
S' •
1889
1900
1895
104.125 00
I 1
•
100,000 00
22,
1890
1900
1895
102.755 00
•• 1
•
100.000 00
23.
1891
1901
1896
102,450 00
1
•
100.000 00
24,
1891
1902
1897
102,220 00
.
•
100,000 00
s* •
1892
1902
1897
102.350 OO
.
•
100,000 00
26,
1893
1903
1898
83,375 00
>
$2,645,128 00
81.500 00
A.
1891
1901
1896
102,060 00
1
-
100,000 00
B,
1891
1901
1896
103,355 00
1
.
100,000 00
£•
1892
1902
1897
102,035 00
1
.
100,000 00
5»
1892
1902
1897
102.545 00
.
.
100,000 00
5»
1892
1902
1897
79.535 00
1
•
76.400 00
;•
1892
1902
1897
102,086 00
.
100.000 00
o.
1892
1902
1897
84.970 00
.
.
84,600 00
H,
1892
1903
1898
73,535 00
. [
•
71,300 00
V
1893
1903
1898
43.290 00
~ 1
.
42.000 00
J.
1893
1908
1896
54.678 00
_ 1
.
53.000 00
K.
1894
1904
1899
fi0,085 00
.
.
57.000 00
L,
1894
1904
1899
17,150 00
.
.
16.000 00
M.
1894
1904
1899
85.800 00
•
962,123 00
35.000 00
1 and 2,
-
-
-
268,900 00
- 1
.
242,500 00
B.
-
-
-
138,385 00
-
-
133,593 25
A,
44
-
-
-
120,540 00
-
527,825 00
113,878 00
Short tei
'm bo
Dda.
-
-
-
-
-
( 600 00
85,175 00
AA, .
7
—
—
-
■>
$41,081 77
•
90.000 00
B.
ek
-
107,163 05
148.244 82
82,081 58
$4,135,071 00
$148,244 82
$4,283,316 82
$4,162,127 83
Statb of New York.
CouNTT OF Nsw York, es. I, W. F. Bartlett, Treasarer of the aforesaid com-
panj, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my
knowledge and belief. W. F. Bartlbtt.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this thirty-flrst day of October, 1894.
L. L. Cassxdt, Notary Public,
Kings County,
Certificate filed in New 7ork Connty.
22 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
THE NEW ENGLAND MORTGAGE SECURITY
COMPANY,
Brooklyn, Conn.
John F. F. fiREWBTBR, Pretident^ Boston, Mass.
John P. R. Sherman, Treaaurer^ Boston, Mass.
y Secretary and Assistant Treasurer *
[Sbptbmbbr 29, 1894.]
Assets,
Loans secnred by first liens on real estate, f 2,382,092 52
Loans on collateral security, 10,3nO 00
Loans on personal security, 73 85
Bonds (see Schedule A) 40.17125
Real estate acquired by foreclosure, 847,248 46
Expenses on account of foreclosure, 19,043 4S
Due from sundry persons, 12,092 09
Due from banks and bankers, 29,347 83
Cash in office, 153 21
Total, 13,340,572 68
Liahilities.
Capital stock paid in f 1,000,000 00
Undivided profits 46,427 95
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 2,268,000 00
Due to banks and bankers and sundry persons, 208 96
Other liabilities, viz. : —
Coupon interest due and unpaid on debenture bonds, .... 14,247 50
Deferred commission accounts, 11,462 94
Waiting distribution, 1,225 33
Total, 13,340,572 68
When organized : 1875. Under what State laws : Connecticut.
Principal place of business : Boston, Mass.
Authorized amount of capital, f 1,000,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed 1,000,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid In cash ? f 1,000,000.
Liability of stocliholders beyond capital paid in : None.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
$141,900.
How much, if any of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past five years : 6 per cent, for four years, 6 per
cent, for last year.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No, 42.
23
State the sections of country in which loans are located : In Minnesota,
North and South Dalcota, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Idaho, Montana,
Washington, Oregon, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Ala-
bama, Georgia and South Carolina.
Total amount loaned to date, f 12,596,636 71
Total amounto of loans deducted, 10,214,544 19
{Guaranteed and sold : None.
Unguaranteed and sold: None.
Owned by company, .... 2,882,092 62
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? Tes.
Total amount of debentures countersigned, 2,66t),000 00
Less amount on hand, •195,000 00
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement, .... 2,268,000 00
* Bought and cancelled, $87,000.
Schedule A.
Description of Bonds.
DESCRIPTION.
Par Value.
Book Yalue.
The New England Mortgage Security Company, series F,
The New En>;land Mortgage Security Company, series H,
The New England Mortgage Security Company, series I,
The New England Mortgage Security Company, series J,
The New England Mortgage Security Company, series K,
The New England Mortgage Security Company, series L,
$22,000 00
12.000 00
3,000 00
4,000 00
2.000 00
2,000 00
$18,987 50
11.056 25
2,702 50
3,640 00
1,800 00
1,985 00
$45,000 00
$40,171 25
Schedule B.
Statement of Debenture Bonds Countersigned hy Directors,
SERIES.
Bate per
Gent
F,
H.
I.
J.
K,
L,
Yeab whbn
Dated.
Dae.
Redeem-
able.
1882
1886
1886
1887
1888
1890
1902
1896
1896
1897
1898
1895
Not.
Not.
Not.
Not.
Not.
Not.
Amount of
Debentarei.
$500,000 00
500,000 00
500,000 00
300,000 00
250,000 00
600,000 00
f 2,550,000 00
State of Massaohusbtts.
County of Suffolk, ss. I, John P. R. Sherman, Treasurer of the aforesaid
company, do solemnly swear that the aforesaid statement is true, to the best of my
knowledge and belief. John P. B. Sherman.
Snbfcribed and sworn to before me this eleventh day of October, 1894.
Abthur p. Fiske, Notary Public,
24 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
THE NEW ENGLAND NORTHWESTERN INVESTMENT
COMPANY,
Seattle, Washington.
Hon. Hemrt N. Fishbb, President and Trecuurer, Waltham, Mass.
TiMOTUT Remick, Vice-President, Boston, Mass.
Hampden Fairfibld, Esq., Secretary, Saco, Me.
[October 1, 1894.]
Assets.
Loans secnred by first liens on real estate, ^.5,061 15
Real estate purchased, 138,847 53
Furniture and fixtures, 1,000 00
Cash in office, 4,059 12
Other assets, viz. : —
Warrants, 2,341 95
Accrued interest to October], 2,629 30
Due on contracts, 22,371 73
Total, $206,310 78
Liabilities.
Capital stock paid In, f 147,300 00
Undivided profits 6,287 79
Bills payable, 11,722 99
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 26,000 00
Other liabilities, viz. : —
Loans on business block, 15,000 00
Total $206,810 78
When organized : June 26, 1894. Under what State laws : Washington.
Principal place of business : Seattle, Washington.
Authorized amount of capital, $200,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 200,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid In cash ? $147,300.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in: For amount sub-
scrlljed for.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
$49,200.
How much, if any, of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past five years : 6 per cent, per annum sinoe
organization.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 42.
25
Do yon cause a penonal examination of offered secnrity to be made bj
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
inflaenoes ? Tes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving; the prin-
cipal counties : All loans are on property located at Seattle, Wash-
ington.
Total amount loaned to date, . •
Total amounts of loans paid,
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years, . . 1
„ , , , . , f Unguaranteed and sold,
ToUil»inountoflo.n.mip«d.}o„„,^^y^^p,„y_ . . . .
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
Total amount of debentures certified,
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement, ....
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company.
$63,305 00
26,743 85
450 00
1,500 00
35,061 15
26,000 00
26,000 00
Schedule 6.
Staiemeni of Debenture Bonds Certified to by Trustees*
Rate
per
Cent.
Ybah wrbh
Seeared by
Amoukt of
6EKIES.
Dated. Dae.
Pledge of First
Mongage Loans.
1
Becarity.
Debentnres.
S, • •
6 1
6 1
1890 189.'}
1892 1895
i $19,650 00
8,050 00
$19,650 00
8,050 00
1
1
$18,300 00
7,700 00
State of Massacbusettb.
County of Suffolk, ss. I, Henry N. Fisher, President of the aforesaid company,
do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my knowledge
and belief. Henrt N. Fisuek.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this fifth day of November, 1894.
N. Sumner Mtbxck, Justice of the Peace.
26 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan
THE NORTHERN INVESTMENT COMPANY,
Lexington, Ky., and Boston, Mass.
C. D. Foster, President^ Boston, Mass.
A. A. UowE, TreatureTt Newtoiii Mass.
[OCTOBBR 1, 1894.]
Stocks and bonds (see Schedule A), at cost, f 184,260 00
Real estate purchased, cost, including Interest, taxes, etc , paid, less
income, 2,172,346 37
Furniture and fixtures (hotel), 6,840 00
Due from sundry persons, 30,414 99
Due from banks and bankers, 12,614 85
Cash in office, 356 47
Total, $2,406,832 68
lAobilitieM,
Capital stock paid in, f 1,691,900 00
Mortgages and bills payable, . .^ 712,564 03
Dividends unpaid, 827 98
Due to sundry persons on account, 1,540 67
Total, f 2,406,832 68
When organized : Sept. 30, 1890. Under what State laws : Kentucky.
Principal place of business : Lexington, Ky.
Authorized amount of capital $20,000,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 1,691,900 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? $1,691,900.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
861,100.00.
How much, if any, of the stock owned by its officers Is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past five years : 6i per cent, until May, 1898 ;
none since.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 42.
27
SOHEDULB A.
DeacripHon of Stocks and Bonds.
DESCRIPTIOCr.
Par Valoe.
Book Value.
First Mortgage Bonds Leeds Improrement and Land
Company
Massachnsetts Real Estate Company stock, .
Iowa Savings Bank Building Company stock, 1,1G5 shares,
Boston Investment Company stock,
Northern Investment Company stock as collateral,
$23,160 00
44,100 00
lin,500 00
1,000 00
86,000 00
a
$23,160 00
44,100 00
80,000 00
1,000 00
36,000 00
$219,760 00
$184,260 00
Statb of Massaohusbtts.
CoutrTT of Suffolk, ss. I, Alden A. Howe, Treasarer of the aforesaid com-
pany, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is tme, to the best of my
knowledge and belief. Aldbn A. Howb, Treasurer.
Sabscribed and sworn to before me this nineteenth day of October, 1894.
TflOMAS Wbstox, Justice of the Peace.
28 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
OMAHA LOAN AND TRUST COMPATTT,
Omahay Nebraska.
A. U. Wyman, President.
J. J. Brown, Vice-President.
W. T. Wtman, Secretary and Treasurer.
Gbo. B. Lake, Coiauel.
[October 1, 1894.]
Assets.
Loans secnred by first liens on real estate, $786,205 00
Loans secured by second liens on real estate, 70,834 49
Loans on collateral secnrity, 19,000 00
Loans on personal secnrlty, ....*.... 10,435 71
Tax sale certificates, 15,170 22
Stocks and bonds (see Schedale A) 115,650 00
Real estate acquired by foreclosure, 202,224 14
Foreclosure account 53,852 60
Frenoiums paid on stocks and bonds, 15,000 00
Furniture and fixtures, 5,000 00
Past due Interest matured within 60 days, 10,174 53
Other past due interest, 25,740 89
Past due loans remitted for 56,350 00
Due on uncompleted loans, A5 87
Due fh>m sundry persons, 33,861 21
Due from banks and bankers 342 08
Other assets, y\z. : —
Coupons prepaid by company, 176 75
Loans on company's real estate, 39,850 00
Total $1,459,923 35
Liabilities.
Capital stock paid in $400,000 00
Surplus fund, 50,000 00
Undivided profits, 72,539 00
Bills payable 77,011 67
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 624,000 00
Interest paid in advance by borrowers, 7,143 36
Loans paid, but not remitted for 20,106 00
Trust savings deposits, 56,714 92
Other deposits, 20,795 SO
Due to banks and bankers, 74,117 39
Other liabilities, viz : —
Outstanding coupon account, 8,096 71
Rediscounts, 9,000 00
Encumbrance on real estate, 40,400 00
Total, $1,459,923 35
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
29
When orfi^nized : 1886. Under what State laws : Nebraska.
Principal place of basiness : Omaha, Nebraska.
Authorized amount of capital, $1,000,000 00
Amount of capiul subscribed, 600,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? $400,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : Amount of subscrip-
tion.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
$147,000.
How much, if any, of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amount of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past five years : 1889, 3 per cent. ; 1890. li^ per
cent. ; 1891, 3 per cent. ; 1892, 6 per cent. ; 1893, none. AUon $600,000.
Do yon cause a personal examination of offered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
influences ? Yes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties: Eastern Nebraska, Southern Iowa and Northern
Missonri.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six months or
more in arrears (principal), 78 133,850 00
Total amount loaned to date -*
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years, ... -*
{Guaranteed and sold, ... -*
Unguaranteed and sold, ... -*
Owned by company, .... -•
Total amount in process of foreclosure, 163,750 00
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? No.
Total amount of debentures certified 630,000 00
Less amount on hand and with agents, 6,000 00
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement, .... 624,00000
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company.
SOHBDULB A.
Description of Stocks and Bonds.
DKSCKIPTION.
Par Value.
Market
Valae.
Book Value.
Omaha Sayings Bank stock, ....
Omftba Loan and Trust Company stocl(,
Omaha Loan and Trust Company Savings
Bank stock,
German Savmgs Bank stock,
$5,000 00
60,000 00
49,650 00
1,000 00
$10,000 00
$5,000 00
60,000 00
49,660 00
1,000 00
$116,660 00
-
$115,650 00
The Trust Company stock has always been carried at $75,000, the amount paid for
it, ami! this year, when the 20 per cent, premium paid on same was charged from
this accoaot to premium account, as shown in statement.
* Bee lost report. Figures not complete for this year.
30 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
80HBDULB B.
Statement of Debenture Bonds Certified to by Trueteee,
Ybab whim
Amount of
Rate
per
SERIES.
Redeem-
Cent.
Dated.
Dae.
able.
Security.
Debentnree.
£i • • •
6
1889
1899
1894*
$60,000 00
$^,000 00
F, .
6
1889
1899
1894»
00,000 00
60,000 00
G,
6
1889
1899
1894*
60,000 00
60,000 00
H. ,
6
1889
1899
1894*
60,000 00
60,000 00
I.
6
1889
1899
1894«
60,000 00
60,000 00
K, .
6
1889
1899
1894«
60,000 00
60,000 00
L,
6
1889
1899
1894*
60,000 00
60,000 00
M. .
6
1890
1900
1895«
60,000 00
60,000 00
N. .
6
1890
1900
1895*
60,000 00
60,000 00
0. ,
6
1892
1902
1897»
60.000 00
60,000 00
P. .
6
1891
1901
1896*
60,000 00
60.000 00
R. .
6
1892
1902
1897*
60,000 00
60,000 00
8, .
H
1893
1903
1898«
30,000 00
30,000 00
f 630,000 00
$630,000 00
* All first mortgage loans.
Twenty thoQsand dollars of series "S" withdrawn from sale and retamed to
trustee.
State of Nrbraska.
Conrrr of Douglas, sb. I, Wm. T. Wyman, Treasurer of the aforesaid 00m-
panj, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of mj
knowledge and belief. Wm. T. Wtmak, Treasurer.
Sabscribed and sworn to before me this sixteenth day of NoTomber, 1894.
U. C. Wbedek, Notary PubUe.
Commission expires Jan. 14, 1896.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. 31
THE PBOVIDENT TRUST COMPAinr,
Spokane, Wash.
Cha8. E. Gibson, Pretident, Boston. Chas. G. Rbedeb, Secretary, Spokane.
[OCTOBBB 1, 1894.]
Aeeeie,
Loans secured by first Hens on real estate $308,894 57
Loans secured by second liens on real estate, 7,100 25
Loans on collateral security, ) jo. gg^ „
Loans on personal security, ) *
Tax sale certificates, 2,338 89
Stocks and bonds (see Schedule A) 11,952 52
Real estate purchased, • . ) 8 791 38
Real estate acquired by foreclosure, J
Expenses on account of foreclosure, 179 63
Furniture and fixtures 1,675 89
Past due Interest matured within 60 days, 2,466 64
Other past due interest, 12,477 90
Past due loans remitted for, 4,297 85
Due from branch offices, 1,362 70
Cash in office and bank, 10,995 66
Total $508,517 25
Liabilitiee*
Capital stock paid in, $200,000 00
Surplus ftand, 20,000 00
Dividend declared, paid October 1 5,000 00
UndiTided profits 2,511 90
Bills payable 38,000 00
Doe borrowers on loans in process of completion, 37»050 00
Certificates of deposits bearing interest 183,965 03
Deposits awaiting inrestment, 21,272 82
Other deposits 717 50
Total, $508,517 25
When organized : Established 1886 ; reorganized 1891. Under what
State laws : Washington.
Principal place of business : Boston, Mass., and Spokane, Wash.
Authorized amount of capital, $500,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 200,000 00
What part of the capiUl stock is paid in cash ? $200,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
32 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
How mach of ita capital stock is owned by officers of the Qompany ?
924,000.
How much, if any, of the stock owaed by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amoant of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dividends for past fire years : 6 per cent, to 9 per cent.
Do yon cause a personal examination of offered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free ttom local
influences ? Tes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : City of Spokane, Eastern Washington and Western
Idaho.
State the number and amoant of mortgages with interest six months or
more in arrears, 104
Total amount loaned to date,
Total amounts of loans paid,
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years,
{Guaranteed and sold,
Unguaranteed and sold,
Owned by company, •
Total amount in process of foreclosure, .
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers
officers in Washington for that purpose.
35
$87,700 00
1,312,220 57
383,607 00
22,000 00
616,319 00
3,400 00
808,894 57
15,700 00
No
SCHBDULB A.
Deacripiion of Stocks and Bonda,
DESCRIPTION.
Par ValM.
Seven bonds of The Western Water and Electric Company of
McPhert»on, Kansas,
School bonds,
City and county warrants
Thirty-seven shares of The Washington National Bank of Spo-
kane, Washington
$7,000 00
1,000 00
2-52 52
3.700 00
$11,952 52
Statb of Massachusetts.
County of Suffolk, ss. I, Chas. E. Gibson, President of the aforesaid company,
do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my knowledge
and belief. Chas. £. Gibson.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this twenty-sixth day of October, 1894.
Hemkt L. Jewett, Kataiy Public,
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. 83
THE SECURITY MORTQAGE AND TRUST COMPANY,
DaUas, Texas.
J. T. Thezbvawt, President^ Dallaa.
J. C. 0*CoNOR, lat Vic^-Presidmty Dallas.
A. R. AKDBBW8, 2d Vice-Pretidtnij Dallas.
H.^A. KoHLBR, 3d Vice-President, Dallas.
W. G. Bbbo, Secretary, Dallas.
[Sbptbmbbr 30, 1894.]
Aaaets.
Loans secured by first liens on real estate, $1,678,009 86
Loans secured by second liens on real estate, 79,204 34
Loans on collateral security, i
Loans on personal security, j 6,190 35
Stocks and bonds (see Schedule A), 167,718 00
Real estate acquired by foreclosure 29,774 73
Premiums paid on stocks and bonds, 2,600 00
Other premiums paid, 4,424 16
Furniture and fixtures, 858 40
Past due interest matured within 60 days 8,584 64
Other past due interest, 41,339 77
Due from branch offices and agents, i <m aa &
Due from sundry persons, . • J ' ^
Due from banks and bankers, 26,909 48
Cash in otHce 1,003 88
Other assets, viz. : —
Accrued interest on loans owned by the company, 60,766 71
ToUl, $2,112,361 49
Liabilitiea*
Capital stock paid in, $500,000 00
Surplus fund, 67,600 00
Undirided profits, . . . • 8,177 61
Debenture bonds outstanding (see Schedule B) 1,481,217 60
Interest paid in adYance by borrowers, 867 82
Loans paid, but not remittsd for, 6,896 18
Due borrowers on loans in process of completion, 827 83
Certificates of deposits bearing interest, 2,853 40
DeposiM awaiting inrestment, 9,795 97
Due to branch ofllces and agents, 7,244 07
Other liabilities, via. : —
Accrued interest on debenture bonds, 26,837 04
Coupons due but not presented for payment, 1,134 17
Totol, $2,112,351 49
When organised : July 27, 1887. Under what State laws : Texas.
Principal place of business : Dallas, Texas.
Attthoriced amount of capital $2,000,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 600,000 00
34 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
What part of the capital stock is paid In casb ? $500,000.
Liability of Btockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
Hon mach of its capital stoclc is owned by officers of the company ?
$31,800.
How mach, if any, of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
Total amonnt of its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dlTidends for past Ave years : 1888, 8 per cent. ; 1889, 10 per
cent ; 1890 and 1891, each 8 per cent. ; 1892, 6 per cent.
Do yon cause a personal examination of offered security to be made by
salaried employees of the company who are entirely free from local
influences? 'Yes.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : Grayson, Denton, Collin, Ellis, Dallas, Limestone,
Johnson, Hill, Hamilton, Kaufman, Tarrant, McLennan, Navarro,
Parker, etc.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six months or
more in arrears : No exact data at hand.
Total amount loaned to date about $5,100,000 00
Totalamountsof loans paid, alwut 2,600,000 00
Number and amount of loans extended the past two years : No exact
data at hand.
{Guaranteed and sold,
Unguaranteed and sold,
Owned by company,
Total amonnt In process of foreclosure,
Is the company subject to examination by local State officers ? Tes.
Total amount of debentures certifled,
Total liability for debenture bonds as per statement, ....
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : Holland Trust Company, New York, series A, B, C, E, G,
I, K. L, M, N. 0. P, Q, R, S. T, U, V, X, Y, 28, 27, 28, 29, 30, 81 ;
Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company, Baltimore, series D; Fidelitv
Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Company, Philadelphia, series F
and 35; Trust Company of North AmeHca, Philadelphia, series W;
Ilbnois Trust and Savings Bank, Chicago, series 34; New York
Security and Trust Company, New York, series 32 and 33.
'■}•
2,500,000 00
25,000 00
1,481.217 50
1,481,217 30
SCHBDULB A.
Description of Stocks and Bonds.
DESCRIPTION.
Par Valne.
Market
Valae.
Amount
Charged on
our Books.
25 shares Southern National Bank, .
50 shares Security Investment Company, .
226 shares Summit Town Lot Company,
33 shares State National Bank, .
300 shares Cotton Mills Building Association,
56 shares Texas Farm Land Company,
850 shares Trust Company Building Asso-
ciation
55 shares Dallas and Oak Cliff Company, .
Oak Cliff scrip,
$2,500 00
5,000 00
22,600 00
825 00
30,000 00
6,600 00
85,000 00
55,000 00
325 55
$4,000 00
825 00
.«
.«
-t
293 00
$2,500 00
500 00
22,600 00
825 00
28,000 00
500 00
85,000 00
27,500 00
293 00
-
* None offered for sale.
t Don't know.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
35
SOHEOULB B.
Statement of Debenture Sonde Certified to by Trustees,
1
Fbak whih
Sbcukbd bt Plbdqb of
■
Bate
per
Cent
1
SERIES.
Dated.
Doe.
Redeem-
FInt Mortgage
Second
Mortgage
Amount of
Debentures.
able.
Loans.
Loam.
A,. .
6
1888
1899
1894
952.601 70
^^
£10.000
B, . .
6
1889
1899
1894
39,217 47
—
$32,000
C, . .
6
1889
1899
1894
63,003 76
-
£10.000
1). . .
6
1889
1899
1894
36,676 44
—
$31,000
E. . .
6
1889
1899
1894
63.825 15
-
£10,000
F. . .
6
1889
1899
1894
54,738 40
-
$50,000
G, . .
6
1889
1899
1894
54,952 05
-
£10,000
I, . .
6
1889
1899
1894
52,106 91
-.
£10,000
K. . .
6
1889
1899
1894
55,942 05
-
£10,000
L, . .
6
1889
1899
1894
41,581 97
m.
£7.600
M| • •
6
1889
1899
1894
17,509 92
-
£3.400
N, . .
6
1890
1900
1895
42,858 78
.
£7,800
O, . .
5
1890
1895
1895
51,958 09
.
£10,000
P, . .
0
1890
1895
1895
50,746 12
..
£9.750
Q, . .
5
1890
1895
1895
89.765 00
..
£17.400
K, . .
5
1890
1895
1895
48,000 00
-
£9,300
8. . .
6
1890
1895
1895
62,958 94
-
£10,000
T. . .
6
1890
1895
1895
47,979 75
.
£8.950
U, . .
5
1890
1895
1895
62.063 16
.
£10,000
V, . .
6
1890
1895
1895
52,556 43
.
£10,000
W.. .
5
1890
1900
1895
55.100 00
.
$50,000
£10,000
X, . .
5
1890
1895
1895
51,710 00
•
Y. . .
5
1890
1896
1895
41,236 00
•
£8.000
Z. . .
6
1890
1900
1895
10,500 00
—
$10,000
26,.
5
1890
1900
1895
41,800 00
..
£8,100
27,. .
5
1890
1900
1895
54.660 00
-
£10,000
28,.
5
1890
1900
1895
60.271 75
-
£8,787
29,. .
5
1890
1900
1895
53,403 82
wm
£9.500
80.. .
6
1890
1900
1895
65,039 69
.
£10.000
31, .
6
1891
1896
1896
51.515 00
$3,012 75
£10,000
32, . .
5
1891
1896
1896
52,150 00
3.025 16
i £10,000
33, .
6
1891
1896
1896
53,109 40
1.022 96
£10.000
34, •
5
1891
1896
1896
61.870 00
517 25
£10,000
35, .
5
1894
1904
1899
1.000 00
1
-
1 $900
$1,634,397 74
$7,578 12
i
Statb op Texas.
County of Dallas, ss. I, Wm G. Breg, Secretary of the aforesaid company, do
solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my knowledge
and belief.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this eighth day of November, 1894.
Lbwis M. Dabnet, Notary Ptd>lie,
Dallas County, Texas,
36 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
THE WESTERir SECURITY COMPAinr,
Brooklyn, Conn.
Fbamcis a. Osbork, Prendent, Boston, Mass.
LTseoN GoBBON, Treaturtr, Medford, Mass.
[Commenced business Ootobbr 1, 1894.]
AMeis,
Loans secnred by first liens on real estate |129,078 92
Loans on collateral securitj, 973 24
Tax sale oertiflcates, 32,611 62
Real estate purchased 9,4d8 01
Real estate acquired by foreclosure 103,635 68
Expenses on account of foreclosure, 13,171 11
Current expenses, 094 32
Due from branch offices and agents, 29 25
Other assets, viz. : —
Accrued interest on loans owned by company, 11,098 01
Accrued interest on tax sale oertiflcates, 19,160 70
Advances account tax deeds, 1,644 06
Land sale contracts 8,246 06
Profit and loss, 14,370 83
Total, |344,0S6 31
Liabilities.
Capital stock paid in, |100,000 00
Bills payable, 33,053 04
Bonds outstanding (see Schedule B), 198,485 00
Due to branch offices and agents 80 73
Due to banks and bankers, 8,856 70
Other liabilities, viz. : —
Accrued interest on bonds, 8,383 34
Bond coupons unpaid 30 00
Sale commission, 167 50
Total, . . 9344,056 31
When organized : 1874. Under what State laws : Connecticut.
Principal place of business : Boston, Mass.
Authorized amount of capital f 100,000 00
Amount of capital subscribed, 100,000 00
What part of the capital stock is paid in cash ? 9100,000.
Liability of stockholders beyond capital paid in : None.
How much of its capital stock is owned by officers of the company ?
$200 directly. Through their holding of stock in a corporate stock-
holder they virtually own atjout $40,500 more.
How much, if any of the stock owned by its officers is pledged to the
company as collateral ? None.
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
37
Total amount of Its capital stock held by the company as collateral :
None.
Rates of dlTidends for pastfl?e yean : 7 per cent, per annum for 1 year ;
none for 4 yean.
Do you canse a personal examination of ofiTered secority to be made
by salaried employees of the company who are entirely tree from
local Infloences ? Not regularly, but occasionally.
State the sections of country in which loans are made, giving the prin-
cipal counties : Nebraska, — Custer and Logan counties ; Kansas, —
Onham, Phillips, Rooks and Smith counties ; Minnesota, — Kittson,
Manhall and Polk counties; Washington, — Lincoln and Stevens
counties.
State the number and amount of mortgages with interest six months
or more in arrean, 96 $45,805 00
Total amount loaned to date, 493,581 00
Total amounts of loans paid, 267,116 08
Number and amount of loans extended the past two yean, • . 44 20,474 00
Total amountof loans unpaid, (?«»™°^*«^»; ^^I'^ZVl
I Unguaranteed, 118,289 19
Total amount in process of foreclosure, 15,89100
Is the company suttJect to examination by local State officers ? Tes.
Total amount of debentures certified : None.
Less amount on hand and with agents : None.
Total liability for bonds as per statement, 198,485 00
Trustees for debentures (if more than one class, state series certified to
by each) : None.
SOHEDULB B.
Statement of Debenture Bonds Certified to by Tnuteee,
Bate
per
Cent
Tkab whbv
Seenredby
Pledge of First
Mortgage Loam.
AXOUVT OF
8EBIE9.
Dated.
Dae.
Bedeem-
able.
Security.
Debentures.
A, • •
B, • •
6
6
6
1887
1889
1886 1
18951
(
1895 1
In 6
yean.
After
5 yean.
After
6 yean.
After
5 yean.
mm
1 f 107,485 00
* ••
$108,170 73
$74,000 00
17,000 00
107,485 00
f 107,485 00
$108,175 73
$198,486 00
NoTB.— The series A and B bonds are plain debenture bonds, without specific
security, but hold the unpledged property of the company.
The $107,485 bonds are secured in each case by a deposit with the holder of the
bond of a fint mortgage equal, at least, to the face yalue of the bond, thus making
each bondholder his own trustee.
State op Massachusbtts.
CouKTT OF Suffolk, ss. I, Lysson Gordon, Treasnnr of the aforesaid com-
pany, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true, to the best of my
knowledge and belief. Ltssox Gordon.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this twelfth day of October, 1894.
Walter L. Bovvi, Notary Pvblio*
38 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATNS. [Jan. '95.
Report of Amount of Business done from JuLr 1,
1893, TO July 1, 1894.
Ballon BftDking CompftD7, Sioux City, Iowa,
Belcher {W. C.) Land Mortgage Companj, Fort Worth, Texas,
Colorado Securities Company, Denyer, Col., . . •
Debentare Inrestment Company, Dnbnqoe, Iowa,
Farmland Secnrity Company, Sionz City, Iowa, .
Interstate Mortgage Trust Company, Parsons, Kan., .
Inrestment Trust Company of America, Topeka, Kan.,
Iowa Loan and Trust Company, Des Moines, Iowa,
Massachusetts Real Estate Company, Boston, Mass., .
Middlesex Banking Company, Middletown, Conn.,
Minnesota Loan and Trust Company, Minneapolis, Minn.,
Nebraska Loan and Trust Company, Hastings, Neb., .
New England Loan and Trust Company, Des Moines, Iowa,
New England Northwestern Investment Company, Seattle, Washington
Omaha Loan and Trust Company, Omaha, Neb., ....
ProYident Trust Company, Spokane, Washington,
Security Loan and Trust Company, Des Moines, Iowa,
Vermont Loan and Trust Company, Grand Forks, North Dakota,
Western Security Company, Brooklyn, Conn., ....
Total, .
t6,90O0O
12,200 00
2,000 00
24,345 00
3,050 00
06,920 00
800 00
82,800 00
15,000 00
67,400 00
21,258 00
09,350 00
86.570 00
28,966 00
19.800 00
49.275 00
5,800 00
8,685 00
1,151 00
$562,285 00
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT
OF
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES IN DETAIL.
40
FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS.
[Jan.
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF ASSETS
NABCB.
Location.
First
Mortgages.
Second
Mortgages.
Loans,
Collateral
and
Personal.
1
2
Belcher (W^. 0.) Land BCort-
gage Co.
Farmland Seourity Co.,
Fort Worth, Tex., .
Slouz City, la..
$201,921 05
90,000 00
$66,642 16
$2.177 98
8
Interstate Mortgage Trust
Co.
Iowa Loan ft Tmst Co.,
Parsons, Kan.,
1,150 00
10,784 64
8,118 84
4
Des Moines, la., .
4,102,085 06
-
21,499 27
5
MassachasetU Real BstAte
Co.
Minnesota Loan ft Trust Co.,
Boston, Mass., •
-
84,074 96
-
6
Minneapolis, Minn.,
177,816 18
8,094 11
602,843 60
7
Nebraska Loan ft Trust Co.,
Hastings, Neb.,
1,939.477 24
169,464 68
6.290 66
8
New England Loan & Trust
Cln
Des Moines, la., •
4,488,747 85
9,606 68
7,126 07
0
10
11
New Enffland Mortgage Se-
curity Co.
New England Northwestern
Investment Co.
Northern Investment Co., .
Brooklyn, Conn., .
Seattle, Wash.,
Boston, Mass.,
2,882.092 52
85,061 15
-
10,423 85
12
Omaha Loan ft Trust Co., .
Omaha, Neb
786,206 00
70,884 45
29,435 n
18
Provident Trust Co., .
Spokane, Wash., .
808,894 57
7,100 25
136.993 87
14
Security Mortgage ft Trust
Co.
Western Security Co., .
Dallas, Tex , . • .
1,678,009 86
70,204 84
6.190 85
16
Brooklyn, Conn., •
129,078 92
-
973 24
$16,429 989 60
$434,806 06
$730.067 33
COMI
*ARATIVE Si
rATEMENT OF AsSETS
NAME.
Location.
Current
Expenses.
Past Due
Interest Ma-
tured within
Sixty Days.
Other
Past Dae
Interest.
1
2
Belcher (W. C.) Land Mort-
gage Co.
Farmland Security Co.,
Fort Worth, Tex., .
Sioux City, la..
$10,039 03
$1,230 16
$10,960 56
21,840 00
8
Interstate Mortgage Trust
Co.
Iowa Loan ft Trust Co.,
Parsons, Kan.,
7,848 97
263 25
227 75
4
Des Moloes, la., •
-
-
6
Mnssachusetts Real EsUte
Co.
Minnesota Loan ft Trust Co.,
Boston, Mass.,
6,487 48
-
6,414 M
6
Minneapolis, Minn.,
-
-
-
7
Nebraska Loan ft Trust Co.,
Hastings, Neb ,
-
11,029 08
85.818 92
8
New England Loan ft Trust
Co.
New England Mortgage Se
cnrity Co.
New England Northwestern
Investment Co.
Northern Investment Co., .
Det Moines, la..
-
-
83,856 16
9
10
11
Brooklyn, Conn., •
Seattle, Wash.,
Boston, Mass.,
-
-
-
12
Omaha Loan ft Trust Co., .
Omaha, Neb., . •
-
10.174 63
25,740 89
13
Provident Trust Co., .
Spokane, Wash., .
..
2,466 64
12,4T7 90
14
Security Mortgage ft Trust
Dallas, Tex., .
-
8,684 64
41.SS9 77
15
Western Security Co., .
Brooklyn, Conn., .
694 82
-
-
$23,464 80
$28,748 80
$»7.«7« M
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
41
AND LIABILITIES IN DETAIL.
Tax Safe
CerUficates.
1
Stocks
and Bonds.
Real Estate.
Real Bsute
by
Foreclosare.
Foreclosare
Expense.
Premlnms
Paid.
Furniture
and
Fixtures.
$&53 25
-
-
$38,147 06
-
$10,000 00
$1,132 75
1
-
-
-
82.400 00
$1,942 02
-
-
2
429 88
$1,000 00
-
42,887 09
-
9,000 00
2,331 46
8
12,94183
4,400 40
$136,000 00
154,074 80
194 86
-
-
4
-
1,100 00
2,638,653 41
-
-
04 97
2,255 60
5
-
80,060 18
206,890 64
96,406 43
609 57
-
-
6
24,818 97
-
63,101 M
170,204 84
87,412 83
-
6,158 15
7
22,886 91
14,721 00
-
843,851 86
88,657 76
-
8,120 08
8
-
40,171 25
-
847,248 45
19,048 48
-
-
0
-
-
188,847 58
-
-
-
1,000 00
10
-
184,260 00
2,172,346 87
-
-
-
6,840 00
11
16,170 22
116,650 00
-
202,224 14
58,852 50
15,000 00
5,000 00
12
2,338 89
11,952 52
-
8,701 38
170 68
1,675 80
18
-
167,718 00
-
29.774 78
-
6,024 15
858 40
14
82,611 02
-
0.468 01
103,635 68
18,171 11
-
-
15
$111,620 02
$571,033 35
$5,454,292 60
$2,073,786 05
$215,063 66
$41,010 12
$34,372 23
AND Liabilities in Detail — Continued.
Past Doe
Loans
Remitted for.
Due on
Uncompleted
Loans.
Due
from Brancb
Offices and
Agents.
Due
from Sundry
Persons.
Due
from Banks
and Bankers.
Ossh
In Office.
Other
Assets.
-
-
-
$1,068 60
$16,110 62
-
$14,980 68
1
o
$1,850 00
^
.
4,005 08
186 26
$216 84
88,664 77
8
-
-
-
10,890 57
70,746 06
4,124 42
141,750 37
4
-
-
-
40,898 96
16,879 02
-
-
6
-
-
-
17,508 25
904,008 77
11,848 03
100,650 00
6
-
-
-
-
-
15,048 00
110,507 52
7
18,500 00
-
$44,181 62
-
-
52,912 48
807,000 89
8
-
-
-
12,002 00
29,847 83
158 21
-
0
-
-
-
-
-
4,050 12
37,842 98
10
-
-
-
80,414 90
12,614 86
866 47
-
11
M,360 00
$55 87
-
88,861 21
842 08
-
40,026 76
12
4,207 85
-
1,852 70
-
-
10,096 66
-
18
-
-
26,067 18
-
26,909 48
1,008 88
50,766 71
14
-
-
20 25
-
-
54.509 16
16
$80,497 86
$55 87
$71,580 65
$161,136 65
$375,507 87
$100,707 70
$805,808 83
42
FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS.
[Jan.
Comparative Statement of Assets
NAME.
Location.
Total
AbmLi.
CaplUl
Pftldin.
Burplu
and
UlKlfTldfld
Profiu.
1 Belcher (W. 0.) Land Mort-
gage Co.
2 Farmland Security Co.,
8 Interstate Mortgage Trust
Co.
4 Iowa Loan & Trust Co.,
5 Massachnsetta Real Estate
Co.
6 Minnesota Loan 8t Trust Co.,
7 Nebraska Loan Sc Trust Co.,
8 New England Loan & Trust
Co.
0 New England Mortgage Be*
curily Co.
10 New England Northwestern
Investment Co.
11 Northern Investment Co., .
12 Omaha Loan 8c Trust Co., .
13 Provident Trust Co., .
14 Security Mortgage Sc Trust
Co.
16 Western Security Co., .
Fort Worth, Tex.,
Sioux City, la..
Parsons, Kan.,
Des Moines, la.,
Boston, Mass.,
Minneapolis, Minn.
Hastings, Neb.,
Des Moines, la.,
Brooklyn, Conn.,
Seattle, Wash.,
Boston, Mass.,
Omaha, Neb., .
Spokane, Wash.,
Dallas, Tex., .
Brooklyn, Conn.,
$419,882 41
145,682 92
127,903 08
4,717,178 78
2,745,868 89
1,446,220 66
2,694,916 92
6,385,467 26
3,340,672 68
206,810 78
2,406,832 68
1,459,923 35
508,517 25
2,112,351 49
344.056 31
$28,061,178 40
$83,363 00
8,000 00
100,000 00
600,000 00
2,000,000 00
600,000 00
600.000 00
760,000 00
1,000,000 00
147,800 00
1,691,900 00
400,000 00
200,000 00
600,000 00
100,000 00
$8,485,568 00
$48,600 68
8t,598 02
14,461 42
814,981 08
26,117 26
164,410 81
157,144 40
100,767 24
45.427 95
6,287 79
122,639 00
27,511 90
76,677 51
$1,187,525 06
Comparative Statement of Assets
NAME.
Location.
Trust
Savings
Deposiu.
Certiflcates
of Deposits
Bearing
Interest.
Deposits
Awaiting
Investment.
1 Belcher (W. C.) Land Mort-
gage Co.
2 Farmland Security Co.,
8 Interstate Mortgage Trust
Co.
4 Iowa Loan & Trust Co.,
6 Massachusetts Real Estate
Co.
6 Minnesota Loan 8c Trust Co.,
7 Nebraska Loan 8c Trust Co.,
8 New England Loan ft Trust
Co.
9 Now England Mortgage Se-
curity Co.
10 New England Northwestern
Inv(!siment Co.
11 Northern Investment Co., .
12 Omaha Loan & Trust Co., .
13 Provident Trust Co., .
14 Security Mortgage ft Trust
Co.
16 Western Security Co., .
Port Worth, Tex.,
Sioux City, la..
Parsons, Kan.,
Des Moines, la.,
Boston, Mass.,
Minneapolis, Minn
Hastings, Neb.,
Des Moines, la.,
Brooklyn, Conn.,
Seattle, Wash.,
Boston, Mass.,
Omaha, Neb., .
Spokane, Wash.,
Dallas, Tex., .
Brooklyn, Conn.,
$56,714 92
$56,714 92
$27,836 69
141,898 85
340,904 86
183,965 03
2,858 40
$705,457 33
$2,800 00
66,164 87
49,338 88
141,812 96
21,272 82
9,T95 97
$280,206 01
1895.]
PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42.
43
AMD Liabilities in Detail — Continued.
BilU Payable.
Debentares
Oatstanding.
Diyldends
Unpaid.
laterest Paid
In Advance by
Borrowers.
Loans Paid
bat not
Remitted for.
Due
Borrowers on
Uncompleted
Loans.
$26,600 00
$228,614 00
-
$2,146 04
«
-
1
14,700 00
82,600 00
-
-
-
-
2
-
-
$80 00
1,614 48
-
$6,897 00
8
-
8,728,700 00
-
-
-
-
4
-
-
2,846 01
-
-
-
6
-
-
-
-
-
10,806 06
6
40,000 00
1,012,600 00
-
8,676 04
- ^
-
7
145,000 00
4,117,627 83
-
16.261 16
-
16,198 14
8
-
2,268,000 00
-
-
-
-
9
11,722 00
26,000 00
-
-
-
-
10
712,601 03
-
827 08
-
-
-
11
77,011 07
624,000 00
*■
7,143 86
$20,106 00
-
12
88,000 00
-
-
-
-
87,050 00
13
-
1,481,217 60
-
867 82
6,896 18
827 88
14
88,053 04
198,486 00
-
-
-
-
15
$1,007,651 78
$14,607,744 88
$8,708 90
$85,698 74
$26,002 18
$69,270 08
AKD Liabilities in Detail — Concluded.
Other
Depoetu.
Dneto
Branch Ofllcee
and Agents.
Dae to Banks
and
Bankers.
Other
Llabiuaee.
ToUl
LUblUUes.
-
-
-
$0,824 00
$419,882 41
1
-
-
-
10,884 00
145.682 92
2
$2,640 23
$260 00
-
800 00
127,908 08
8
14,180 88
-
$843 17
22,078 25
4.717,176 78
4
-
-
716,896 62
2,745.368 89
6
876.944 05
-
-
1,446,220 65
6
687 94
-
-
26,669 26
2,691,916 92
7
76,887 98
-
-
4,442 01
5,886.467 26
8
-
-
208 96
26,936 77
8,340,572 68
9
-
-
-
15,000 00
206,810 78
10
-
-
-
1,510 67
2,406,882 68
11
20.706 80
-
74,117 89
67,496 71
1,460.928 85
12
717 60
-
-
-
508,517 25
13
-
7,244 07
-
27,971 21
2,112,861 49
14
-
80 78
8,856 70
8.680 84
844.056 81
15
$401,103 88
$7,684 80
$70,026 22
$928,113 28
$28,061,178 40
44 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
COMMONWEALTn OF KASSACHUSBTTS.
Laws in reference to the Supervision of Foreign
Corporations engaged in the Business of Selling
OR Negotiating Bonds, Mortgages, Notes or other
Choses in Action.
[Chap. 427. Acts of 1889, as amended bt Chap. 275, Acts op 1801, Chap. 903,
Acts op 1808.]
Section 1. The governor by and with the consent of the
council shall appoint a citizen of this Commonwealth who shall be
known as commissioner of foreign mortgage corporations. Said
commissioner shall hold his office for the term of three years
unless sooner removed by the governor and council. He shall
be sworn to the faithful performance of the duties of bis office
before entering upon the discharge of the same. He shall not be
in the employ of, own any stock in, or be in any way, directly
or indirectly, interested pecuniarily in any association or corpora-
tion doing business in this Commonwealth and organized under the
laws of another state which sells, offers for sale or negotiates
bonds or notes secured by deed of trust or mortgage of i*eal
estate, shares of stock in real estate investment companies, or
choses in action owned, issued, negotiated or guaranteed by it, and
known as a mortgage, loan, investment or trust company. Said
commissioner shall as regards such corporations have the same
powers and be required to perform the same duties given to and
required of the commissioners of savings banks by the provisions
of section fourteen of chapter three hundred and eighty-seven of
the acts of the year eighteen hundred and eighty-eight, and such
associations or corporations shall annually make to said com-
missioner such returns as are required of loan and investment
companies by said section fourteen. If a vacancy occurs in said
office before the expiration of a term the governor and council
shall appoint another commissioner as aforesaid to fill such
vacancy and to serve for the remainder of such unexpired term.
Sect. 2. No person, association or corporation shall act in
this Commonwealth as agent or representative of any association
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42, 45
or corporation organized nnder the laws of another state for the
purposes named in the preceding section unless such corporation
has been duly examined as to its business and financial condition
by the commissioner hereinbefore provided for.
Sect. 3. Any person who violates the provisions of the pre-
ceding section shall forfeit one thousand dollars, to be collected
under the direction of the attorney-general for the Commonwealth
by the district attorney for the district in which such action may
properly arise, by an action on this chapter, and it is hereby made
the duty of the attorney-general to bring action for such for-
feiture whenever an instance of such violation is reported to him
by the commissioner, and the commissioner shall report all such
instances as come to his attention.
Sect. 4. The commissioner may accept in lieu of an examina-
tion by himself the certificate of any state ofiScer having super-
vision of such companies that examinations have been made,
pffrovided such certificates are accompanied by a sworn statement
showing the financial condition of any such company ; such report
to comply in all respects with the provisions of this chapter.
Sect. 5. It shall be the dutv of said commissioner to make
the examination as provided in section two or to call for the
certificate as provided in section four as often at least as once in
each year.
Sect. 6. The compensation of the commissioner shall be three
thousand dollars per annum, payable monthly from the treasury
of the Commonwealth, which, together with all incidental and
travelling expenses authorized and approved by the governor and
council, shall be borne by the several companies and corporations.
For the purpose of providing for the salary of the commissioner
and other expenses approved by the governor and council an
annual license fee of fifty dollars, payable in advance, shall be
assessed upon every association or corporation doing business
under this act : provided^ that if the sum realized is not sufiScient
to meet the expenses, the balance shall be borne by the several
companies in proportion to their business done in this Common-
wealth, and shall be assessed and recovered in the same manner
provided for the assessment and recovery of the expenses of the
railroad commissioners.
The commissioner upon the payment of such fee shall, if satis-
fied with the condition of any company or corporation doing busi-
ness nnder the provisions of this chapter, issue a license to such
company or corporation allowing them to do business in this Com-
monwealth for one year from the date thereof: provided^ their
condition continues satisfactory to him ; and no company or cor-
46 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATIONS. [Jan.
poration subject to the provisions of this chapter shall do basiness
in this Commonwealth unless it holds such a license, and if the
condition of any company shall become unsatisfactory to him he
may revoke such license.
Sect. 7. Whenever, in the opinion of the commissioner, any
association or corporation named in section one of this act is
transacting business, or its condition is such as to render its
further proceeding, hazardous to the public, he shall forthwith
report the same with such remarks as he deems expedient to the
attorney-general, who shall forthwith apply to a justice of the
supreme judicial court to issue an injunction restraining such
association or corporation from further transaction of business
until a hearing can be had. Such justice may, with or without
previous notice, issue such injunction, and after a full hearing
may dissolve or modify it or make it perpetual, and may make
such orders and decrees, according to the course of proceedings
in equity, to restrain or prohibit the further prosecution of the
business of any such person, association or corporation, as may
be needful in the premises.
Sect. 8. Every association or corporation named in section
one of this act, shall, whenever the interest upon any bond or
note which has been guaranteed, negotiated or sold by it, has been
overdue for a period of six months and not paid in cash, inform
the owner of said bond or note of the fact ; and when the taxes
upon real estate held as security for any such bond or note are
overdue for a period of six months, shall inform the owner of said
bond or note of said fact ; and if said taxes have been paid by
any other than the owner of the real estate held as security for
said bond or note, shall inform the owner of such bond or note of
the name of the person or corporation paying said taxes. Any
such association or corparation which violates the provision of this
section shall, for each and every offence, forfeit one hundred
dollars, to be collected by information brought in the supreme
judicial court in the name of the attorney-general, at the relation
of the commissioner of foreign mortgage corporations, and upon
such information the court may issue an injunction restraining
the further prosecution of the business of such association or cor-
poration until the sums so forfeited are paid, with interests and
costs, and until the provisions of this section shall have been
complied with.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 42. 47
[Chap. 887, Acts of 1888.]
An Act in relation to mortgage loan and investment com-
panies.
« « « « « « « «'« « «
Sect. 14. The commissioners of savings banks shall have
access to the vaults, books and papers of every such corporation ;
and it shall be their duty to inspect, examine and inquire into its
affairs and take proceedings in regard to them at such times as
they shall deem necessary, in the same manner and to the same
extent as if such corporation was a savings bank, subject to all
the laws which are now or hereafter may be in force relating to
such institutions in this regard : providtd, however^ said commis-
sioners may cause any examination to be made by an expert under
their direction but at the expense of the corporation. Every such
corporation shall annually, within ten days after the last business
day of October, make a return to said commissioners, which return
shall be in the form of a trial balance of its books, and shall
specify the different kinds of its liabilities and the different kinds
of its assets, stating the amount of each kind in accordance with
a blank form to be furnished bv said commissioners, and such
annual returns shall be published in a newspaper of the city or
town where such corporation is located, at the expense of such
corporation, at such times and in such manner as may be directed
by said commissioners. Said commissioners shall annually make
report to the general court of such facts and statements respect-
ing such corporations and in such forms as they deem that the
public interest requires.
[Chap. 820, Acts or 1890.]
An Act concerning the use op names by certain corporations
organized under the laws of other states or countries
and doing business in this commonwealth.
Be U enacted^ elc.^ as follows:
Section 1. All corporations organized under -the laws of
another state or country, carrying on a banking, mortgage, loan
and investment or trust business within this Commonwealth, shall
indicate the state or country in which such foreign corporation is
chartered or incorporated upon all its signs, advertisements, cir-
culars, letter-heads and other documents containing its name, in
letters equally conspicuous with the name of such corporation.
48 FOREIGN MORTGAGE CORPORATNS. [Jan.'95.
Sect. 2. Whoever violates any provision of the preceding
section shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one thousand
dollars, and any provision thereof may, on petition, be enforced
by injunction issued by a justice of the supreme judicial court or
of the superior court.
Sect. 3. This act shall take affect on the first day of July in
the year eighteen hundred and ninety.
PUBLIC DOCUMENT .... .... No. 40.
ANNUAL REPORT
or THX
State Board of Arbitration
AND Conciliation
Fob the Ybab bnding Deobmbeb 31, 1894.
BOSTON :
WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO., STATE PRINTERS,
18 Post Office Square.
1895.
€w[t(manixitdt\i d ^j^BBucJ^nBtiiB.-
State Board of Arbitration and Conciliation,
Boston, Feb. 25, 1895.
To the QtneraX Court.
I have the honor to transmit herewith the ninth annual
report of the State Board of Arbitration and Conciliation.
Very respectfully,
BERNARD F. SUPPLE,
CUrk,
CONTENTS.
Pagb
General remarks, 7
Law relating to arbitration and conciliation, ^ ... 12
Reports and decisions, 22
J. W. Thompson & Co., Millis, 23
A. E. Mann, Stoneham, 27
Washington Mills, Lawrence, 80
Wamsutta Mills, New Bedford, 34
Shaw Stocking Company, Lowell, 37
Advertiser Newspaper Company, Boston, 39
Arlington Mills, Lawrence, ........ 42
Merrimack Woolen Mills, Dracut, 46
Enreka Silk Company, Canton, 51
Chase, Merritt & Co., Medway, 54
Boyd & Corey Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Company, Marl-
borough, 56
King Philip Mills, Fall River, 61
J. W. Walcott & Co., Natiek, 63
Lowell Manufacturing Company, Lowell, 65
E. Hodge & Co., Boston, 68
The Transcript Publishing Company, Holyoke, ... 70
Newton Mills, Newton, 76
George G. Snow, Brockton, 79
N. C. Griffin, Wayland, 82
Guyer Hat Company and others, Boston, 84
Drisooll & Eaton, Natiek, 86
£. F. Sanborn, Stoneham, 88
Rockland Company, Rockland, 89
Rice & Hutchins, Boston, 91
Ship Carpenters and Caulkers, Boston, 92
North Wobum Street Railway Company, Wobum, ... 94
6 CONTENTS.
Ashland Shoe and Leather Company, Ashland, .... 102
Chase, Merritt & Co., Marlborough and Medway, 105
George D. Davis, North Andover, 110
Rice & Hntchins, Boston, 112
Spinners and Weavers^ Strike, New Bedford, . . .114
Fall River Strike, Fall River, 119
Parkhill Manufacturing Company, Fitchburg, . . . .130
J. F. Desmond, Marlborough, 134
H. A. Trull, Hudson, 135
H. A. Trull, Hudson, 189
6. B. Brigham & Sons, Westborough, 149
United States Whip Company, Westfield, 150
Donohue & White, Lynn, 152
NINTH ANNUAL REPORT
To the Honorable the Senate and House of BepresenlcUives in General
Court assembled.
The differences which have arisen between
employers and employees in this Commonwealth
during the year 1894 have been sufficiently
numerous, and have made larger demands upon
the time and attention of this Board than in
any former year.
The uncertainty of the financial situation, ap-
prehension of unfavorable results of proposed
legislation, and a general failure of confidence
throughout the business world, were perhaps the
principal causes of a depression, the like of which
has not been known in this country for a century
at least. One result of this unfortunate condition
of things, as observed by this Board, has been a
general reduction in the rate of wages and amount
of earnings all over the State. In some industries
the reduction may be stated more or less definitely
as so much per cent., in others the rate of wages
has remained nominally the same, or nearly the
same, but a shortening of the working time has
8 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
also had the eflfect of reducing the earnings. Re-
ductions in wages^ one following upon another,
have been met by opposition and protests. Strikes
have been frequent, but for the most part without
effect. In particular instance's, when the assist-
ance of the Board has been sought, it has suc-
ceeded in breaking in some degree the force of the
blow, and in securing a promise of better wages
when business should improve; but when manu-
facturers throughout the State were saying, almost
as one man, that the market for their products was
lifeless, and that in their judgment as prudent men
it would be folly, in fact an impossibility, to con-
tinue operations without a reduction in wages, it
was very difficult for any one, even the most hope-
ful, to argue successfully against that position.
The Board could not be blind to the main facts, —
uncertainty and want of confidence. It could not
alter the general conditions ; and in many instances
could only counsel a return to work on the ground
that it was better to be at work, with any wages,
than to be idle. This sort of advice is not very
palatable. To accept it looks like an admission
of defeat, and generally amounts to that, and
therefore such advice is not likely .to be ac-
cepted until the situation is clearly desperate.
Whenever the parties to a controversy have
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 9
been willing to accept a fair settlement, arbitra-
tion and conciliation have produced results as
beneficial as ever to all concerned. When settle-
ments haye been reached in this way, there has
been no cessation of business and no loss of earn-
ings while the matters in dispute were under con-
sideration. On the other hand, it is safe to say
that every strike which has been either wholly or
partially successful has cost the winners far more
than the results were worth, and subjected thfe
employer to great trouble and anxiety, as well as
pecuniary loss. It is simple justice to add, in
connection with this, that some of the strikes
which have occurred during the year have been
preceded by oflfers from the workmen, apparently
made in good faith^ to submit the questions at issue
to arbitration, either by the State Board or by a
board to be selected by the parties for themselves.
During the last year the employees have been rela-
tively more favorable to arbitration than employers.
It requires no great wisdom to foresee the results
of this sort of warfare. If, when business is de-
■ •
pressed, working men and women are expected to
take whatever is oflfered them without being
allowed any opportunity to discuss with their
employers the reasonableness of the offer, it will
surely happen that, wiien business is brisk again,
10 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
demands will be made which will seem to employ-
ers to require very much discussion.
In the last twelve months the work of the Board
and the law creating it have been frequently men-
tioned with approval in other States and countries.
How far such commendations are deserved, it is
not for us to say. But if, as it has been said, our
Commonwealth has adopted the best way yet dis-
covered of dealing with controversies between
employers and employees, it is strange that so
many of the employers and workmen of our State
appear not to realize the importance of it suffi-
ciently to enable them to avert, as they might do,
many of the most troublesome controversies by
appealing to the Board in the first stages of the
dispute, when there is yet time for cool discussion.
The same old theoretical objections are constantly
appearing in quarters where the Board is not
known through practical experience with its work
and methods, and the same old regrets are con-
stantly expressed, that parties interested did not
know in the beginning more about the Board and
the law governing its action.
There is, however, a brighter side for those who
will work and hope. For nine years this Common-
wealth has had a State Board whose duty it is to urge
even upon unwilling ears the practical advantage of
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No, 40. 11
settling disputes by reason and discussion, rather
than by the arbitrary use of force and intimidation.
We believe that progress has been made every year,
that the good influence has been felt all over the
State, and that the methods of arbitration and con-
ciliation have commended themselves, when in
actual operation, in quarters where there had been
either distrust of their practical efficiency or openly
expressed dislike to them on theoretical grounds.
Some recent strikes have been the most exten-
sive and bitterly contested controversies in the
State's history, but although the militia of four
other States were at one time in arms for the pres-
ervation of order and the protection of property,
nothing of the sort has been required in Massa-
chusetts. There is in this very much to encourage
all who are laboring with painful sincerity to recon-
cile the conflicting elements in the industrial world;
for it tends to prove that, whatever may at times
be said or done in the heat of passion, or to pro-
duce a temporary eflFect, there is in our work-
ing population a deep-seated regard for law and
order.
At the time of making up this report a serious
strike is obstructing the business of Haverhill, but
an account of the controversy will most properly
belong to the report for the year 1895.
12 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
The law of the State concerning arbitration is
as follows, being chapter 263 of the Acts of 1886|
entitled, " An Act to provide for a State Board of
Arbitration, for the settlement of diflTerences be-
tween employers and their employees," as amended
by St. 1887, chapter 269; St. 1888, chapter 261;
and St. 1890, chapter 385; also St. 1892, chapter
382.
Section 1. The governor, with the advice and con-
sent of the council, shall, on or before the first day of July
in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-six, appoint three
competent persons to serve as a state board of arbitration
and conciliation in the manner hereinafter provided. One
of them shall be an employer or selected from some asso-
ciation representing employers of labor, one of them shall
be selected from some labor organization and not an em-
ployer of labor, the third shall be appointed upon the
recommendation of the other two : provided^ however ^ that
if the two appointed do not agree on the third man at the
expiration of thirty days, he shall then be appointed by
the governor. They shall hold office for one year or until
their successors are appointed. On the first day of July
in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-seven the gov-
ernor, with the advice and consent of the council, shall
appoint three members of said board in the manner above
provided, one to serve for three years, one for two years
and one for one year, or until their respective successors
are appointed ; and on the first day of July in each year
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No, 40. 13
thereafter the governor shall in the same manner appoint
one member of said board to succeed the member whose
term then expires, and to serve for the term of three
years or until his successor is appointed. If a vacancy
occurs at any time, the governor shall in the same manner
appoint some one to serve out the unexpired term ; and he
may in like manner remove any member of said board.
Each member of said board shall, before entering upon
the duties of his office, be sworn to a faithful discharge
thereof. They shall at once organize by the choice of
one of their number as chairman. Said board may appoint
and remove a clerk of the board, who shall receive such
salary as may be allowed by the board, but not exceeding
twelve hundred dollars a year.
Sect. 2. The board shall, as soon as possible after its
organization, establish such rules of procedure as shall be
approved by the governor and council.
Sect. 3. Whenever any controversy or difference not
involving questions which may be the subject of a suit at
law or bill in equity, exists between an employer, whether
an individual, copartnership or corporation, and his em-
ployees, if at the time he employs not less than twenty-
five persons in the same general line of business in any
city or town in this Commonwealth, the board shall, upon
application as hereinafter provided, and as soon as practi-
cable thereafter, visit the locality of the dispute and
make careful inquiry into the cause thereof, hear all per-
sons interested therein who may come before them, advise
the respective parties what, if anything, ought to be done
14 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
or submitted to by either or both to adjust said dispute,
and make a written decision thereof. This decision shall
at once be made public, shall be recorded upon proper
books of record to be kept by the secretary of said board,
and a short statement thereof published in the annual re-
poil hereinafter provided for, and the said board shall
cause a copy thereof to be filed with the clerk of the city
or town where said business is carried on.
Sect. 4. Said application shall be signed by said
employer or by a majority of his employees in the de-
partment of the business in which the controversy or
difference exists, or their duly authorized agent, or by
both parties, and shall contain a concise statement of the
grievances complained of, and a promise to continue on
in business or at work without any lock-out or strike until
the decision of said board, if it shall be made within
three weeks of the date of filing said application. When
an application is signed by an agent claiming to represent
a majority of such employees, the board shall satisfy itself
that such agent is duly authorized in writing to represent
such employees, but the names of the employees giving
such authority shall be kept secret by said board. As
soon as may be after the receipt of said application the
secretary of said board shall cause public notice to be
given for the time and place for the hearing thereon ; but
public notice need not be given when both parties to the
controversy join in the application and present therewith
a written request that no public notice be given. When
such request is made, notice shall be given to the parties
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No- 40. 15
interested in such manner as the board may order ; and
the board may, at any stage of the proceedings, cause
public notice to be given, notwithstanding such request.
When notice has been given as aforesaid, each of the
parties to the controversy, the employer on the one side,
and the employees interested on the other side, may in
writing nominate, and the board may appoint, one person
to act in the case as expert assistant to the board. The
two persons so appointed shall be skilled in and conver-
sant with the business or trade concerning which the dis-
pute has arisen. It shall be their duty, under the direction
of the board, to obtain and report to* the board informa-
tion concerning the wages paid and the methods and
grades of work prevailing in manufacturing establishments
within the Commonwealth of a character similar to that in
which the matters in dispute have arisen. Said expert
assistants shall be sworn to the faithful discharge of their
duty ; such oath to be administered by any member of the
board, and a record thereof shall be preserved with the
record of the proceedings in the case. They shall be en-
titled to receive from the treasury of the Commonwealth
such compensation as shall be allowed and certified by the
board, together with all necessary travelling expenses.*
Nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent the board
from appointing such other additional expert assistant or
assistants as it may deem necessary. Should the peti-
tioner or petitioners fail to perform the promise made in
said application, the board shall proceed no further there-
* See further as to experts, their duties and oompensation, St. 1892, c. 382,
pott.
16 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
upon without the written consent of the adverse party.
The board shall have power to summon as witness any
operative in the departments of business affected and any
person who keeps the records of wages earned in those
departments, and to examine them under oath, and to re-
quire the production of books containing the record of
wages paid. Summonses may be signed and oaths admin-
istered by any member of the board.
. Sect. 5. Upon the receipt of such application and
after such notice, the board shall proceed as before pro-
vided, and render a written decision, which shall be open
to public inspection,- shall be recorded upon the records
of the board, and published at the discretion of the same
in an annual report to be made to the general court on or
before the first day of February in each year.
Sect. 6. Said decision shall be binding upon the
parties who join in said application for six months, or
until either party has given the other notice in writing of
his intention not to be bound by the same at the expira-
tion of sixty days therefrom. Said notice may be given
to said employees by posting the same in three conspicu-
ous places in the shop or factory where they work.
Sect. 7. The parties to any controversy or difference
as described in section three of this act may submit the
matters in dispute, in writing, to a local board of arbitra-
tion and conciliation ; such board may either be mutually
agreed upon, or the employer may designate one of the
arbitrators, the employees or their duly authorized agent
another, and the two arbitrators so designated may choose
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40, 17
a third, who shall be chairman of the board. Such board
shall, in respect to the matters referred to it, have and
exercise all the powers which the state board might have
and exercise, and its decision shall have whatever binding
effect may be agreed by the parties to the controversy in
the written submission. The jurisdiction of such board
shall be exclusive in respect to the matters submitted to
it, but it may ask and receive the advice and assistance
of the state board. The decision of such board shall be
rendered within ten days of the close of any hearing held
by it ; such decision shall at once be filed with the clerk
of the city or town in which the controversy or difference
arose, and a copy thereof shall be forwarded to the state
board. Each of such arbitrators shall be entitled to re-
ceive from the treasury of the city or town in which the
controversy or difference that is the subject of the arbitra-
tion exists, if such payment is approved in writing by the
mayor of such city or the board of selectmen of such
town, the sum of three dollars for each day of actual ser-
vice, not exceeding ten days for any one arbitration.
Whenever it is made to appear to the mayor of a city or
the board of selectmen of a town that a strike or lock-out
such as described in section eight of this act is seriously
threatened or actually occurs, the mayor of such city or
the board of selectmen of such town shall at once notify
the state board of the facts.
Sect. 8. Whenever it shall come to the knowledge of
the state board, either by notice fi'om the mayor of a city
or the board of selectmen of a town, as provided in the
18 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb,
preceding section or otherwise, that a strike or lock-out
is seriously threatened or has actually occurred in any
city or town of the Commonwealth, involving an employer
and his present or past employees, if at the time he is
employing, or up to the occurrence of the strike or lock-
out was employing, not less than twenty-five persons in
the same general line of business in any city or town in
the Commonwealth, it shall be the duty of the state board
to put itself in communication as soon as may be with
such employer and employees, and endeavor by mediation
to effect an amicable settlement between them, or to
endeavor to persuade them, provided that a strike or lock-
out has not actually occurred or is not then continuing, to
submit the matters in dispute to a local board of arbitra-
tion and conciliation, as above provided, or to the state
board ; and said state board may, if it deems it advisable,
investigate the cause or causes of such controversy, and
ascertain which party thereto is mainly responsible or
blameworthy for the existence or continuance of the same,
and may make and publish a report finding such cause or
causes, and assigning such responsibility or blame. The
board shall have the same powers for the foregoing pur-
poses as are given it by section three of this act.
Sect. 9. Witnesses summoned by the state board
shall be allowed the sum of fifty cents for each attendance,
and the further sum of twenty-five cents for each hour of
attendance in excess of two hours, and shall be allowed
five cents a mile for travel each way from their respective
places of employment or business to the place where the
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40, 19
board is in session. Each witness shall certify in wilting
the amount of his travel and attendance , and the amount
due him shall be paid forthwith by the board, and for
such purpose the board shall be entitled to draw from the
treasury of the Commonwealth, as provided for in chapter
one hundred and seventy-nine of the acts of the year
eighteen hundred and eighty-four.
Sect. 10. The members of said state board shall until
the first day of July in the year eighteen hundred and
eighty-seven be paid five dollars a day each for each day
of actual service ; and on and after said date they shall
each receive a salary at the rate of two thousand dollars
a year, to be paid out of the treasury of the Common-
wealth ; and both before and after said date they shall be
allowed their necessary travelling and other expenses,
which shall be paid out of the treasury of the Common-
wealth.
[St. 1892, Chaptbr 882.]
An Act relating to the duties and compensation of expert
assistants appointed by the state board of arbitration
and oonoiliation.
Be U enacted, etc,, as follows :
Section 1. In all controversies between an employer
and his employees in which application is made to the
state board of arbitration and conciliation, as provided by
section four of chapter two hundred and sixty-three of
the acts of the year eighteen hundred and eighty-six as
amended by section three of chapter two hundred and
sixty- nine of the acts of the year eighteen hundred and
20 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
eighty-seven, and by section one of chapter three hundred
and eighty-five of the acts of the year eighteen hundred
and ninety, said board shall appoint a fit person to act in
the case as expert assistant to the board. Said expert
assistants shall attend the sessions of said board when re-
quired, and no conclusion shall be announced as a decision
of said board, in any case where such assistants have
acted, until after notice given to them, by mail or other-
wise, appointing a time and place for a final conference
between said board and expert assistant on the matters
included in the proposed decision. Said expert assistants
shall be privileged to submit to the board, at any time
before a final decision shall be determined upon and pub-
lished, any facts, advice, arguments or suggestions which
they may deem applicable to the case. They shall be
sworn to the faithful discharge of their duties by any
member of said board, and a record thereof shall be pre-
served with the record of the proceedings in the case.
They shall be entitled to receive for their services from
the treasury of the Commonwealth the sura of seven
dollars for each day of actual service, together with all
their necessary travelling expenses.
Sect. 2. This act shall take efiect upon its passage.
^Approved June 16 j 1892.
The controversies with which the Board was
concerned more or less directly during the year
involved working men and women whose yearly
earnings are estimated at $6,054,900. The total
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 21
earnings for a year, of the same factories and
mills under ordinary circumstances, would be
about $10,039,700. The cost of maintaining the
State Board for a year has been $10,873.15.
During the latter part of the year the time of
the Board was largely occupied with cases of
arbitration, the decisions in which will appear in
the next annual report. In the succeeding pages
of this volume are condensed reports of the most
important controversies with which the Board has
come into actual contact in the year 1894.
REPORTS OF CASES.
REPOKTS OF CASES.
J. W. THOMPSOir A CO. - MII.LIS.
The following decision was rendered on Jan.
10,1894: —
In the maUer of the joint application of J. W. Hiompaon Sb Co.y
of MUliSf and their employees.
Pbtitiok filed Dbcbkbbb 9, 1893. Hbarino, Dbcbmbbr U.
In this case the firm, upon starting up the factory, gave
notice of an intention to reduce wages on certain specified
items. The representatives of the union were unwilling
to consent to the reduction, but expressed a willingness
to do what might upon inquiry appear just. The whole
matter was accordingly submitted to this Board for deter-
mination. After due consideration and investigation the
following prices are recommended for the factory of J. W.
Thompson & Co. at Millis : —
Per doien pairs.
McKay sewing, from heel to heel, or around heel seat, all
kinds of shoes, 10.11
Fair stitching, from ball to ball, National machine, done
after McKay sewing, all kinds of shoes, . . . .11
Attaching heels with blind top lift, McKay rapid heeler,
firm to stick nails and deliver heels to operator, all
kinds, 05^
26 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Fer doasD pain.
Slagging heels, any number of nails, not averaging more
than once all the way around (if more, the price to be
proportionate), Champion machine, all kinds of shoes, f0.04|
Building heels for shoes, whole lifts, Bigelow compressor,
per hundred pairs, ..•.«• fO.SO
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple,
Clerk.
BesvU. The decision of the Board was accepted
and carried into effect.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 27
A. E. MANN A CO. - STONEHAM.
On January 18, a written application was re-
ceived from William H. Harden, representing that
he was the authorized agent of a majority of the
lasters employed by A. E. Mann & Co., at Stone-
ham, alleging their dissatisfaction with the prices
paid for drawing over uppers for the Boston last-
ing machine, and for operating, and for tacking on
outer soles by machine. Immediate action not
being urged, the application was allowed to stand
until February 6, when the Board called upon Mr.
Mann, and made known to him the filing of the
application and the substance thereof. Mr. Mann
said in reply that the lasters employed in his fac-
tory, fourteen in number, were all at work, no
complaint had been made to him, and so far as he
knew there was no controversy about their wages.
He admitted, however, that the agent of the Las-
ters' Protective Union had called upon him and
presented the question of an increase of wages,
and had offered to leave the case to the State
28 BOARD OP ARBITRATION, [Feb.
Board, a proposal which was declined, for the rea-
son, as he said, that there was " nothing to arbi-
trate." He further stated that the prices paid were
in his opinion sufficient, and were all that he could
afford to pay, and, believing, as he did, that there
was really no trouble between the firm and their
workmen, he knew of no reason why he should
take any notice of the application which had been
filed with the Board.
The substance of this interview was reported to
Mr. Marden, who suggested that the matter be
allowed to stand for a while, in order that the
workmen might take further counsel in the matter.
In the latter part of March he called and requested
that the Board would take iip the matter again.
Accordingly the Board called again upon Mr.
Mann, gave him an attested copy of the applica-
tion and asked what course he should take in the
matter. He replied that the lasting machines in
his factory were operated by union men under
a contract with the Boston Lasting Machine
Company, that the company was bound by con-
tract to do his work at a certain price, and that
under the circumstances he should respectfully
decline to join in the application. This reply was
at once reported to Mr. Marden. No further
action was requested by the workmen or by Mr.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No, 40. 29
Mard^en, but subsequently there was a strike, non-
union men were employed to operate the machines,
and after some friction a settlement was effected
on May 12, the firm accepting a modified price-
list submitted by the lasters' union.
80 . BOARD OF ARBITRATION, [Feb.
WASHnraToir mills— lawbeitce.
One of the bitterest controversies of the past
year began on February 10 with a strike of the
operatives of the Washington Mills> at Lawrence.
Four days later the Board received a notice from
the mayor of that city, and in response thereto
went to Lawrence on the 19th. The parties ag-
grieved were the weavers, but most of the opera-
tives, upwards of two thousand, were on strike.
It appeared that in the preceding September
the company had made a general reduction of
wages, amounting to fifteen or twenty per cent.,
which had been submitted to ; that on February 8
notices were posted in the several rooms of the
mills stating that on the 12th instant there would
be a further reduction " of from five to ten per
cent.," and on or before the date specified itemized
lists were posted, making in some instances a
reduction of more than ten per cent. This was
considered by the employees as exceeding the
limit fixed by the first notices, from which they
had understood that no one would be reduced
more than ten per cent. The meaning of the first
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 31
noticeB, as subsequently explained by the agent
of the corporation, was that the average reduction
would be between five and ten per cent. ; and it
was claimed that in this view of it the limit had
not been exceeded. In fact, some of the weavers
were not affected by the reduction at all. On the
day next preceding the strike, a committee of the
weavers, with one finisher, had an interview with
the agent of the mill, but after a full discussion
of the case, the agent remained firm, and insisted
that the reduction must be made.
After meeting both parties, at the suggestion
of the Boai'd, another conference was had between
the treasurer and the agent on the one side, and a
committee of the operatives on the other side, in
the presence of the Board. The agent expressed
his willingness to meet the employees at any time
and talk over the matter with them, and give them
any information in his power, but no concession
was made or hinted at, as to wages. This position
of the corporation remained without alteration
until the strike was broken, on May 5. In the
mean time, repeated attempts at a settlement were
made, not only by the State Board, but also by the
mayor and other public-spirited people of Law-
rence. The operatives were determined that they
would starve, rather than accept the low wages
82 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
offered, and in point of fact many families were
brought to abject poverty. They said, and ap-
peared to believe, that if the schedule of the
Washington Mills should be established, it would
be a signal for corresponding reductions in the
other mills. Under this apprehension, contribu-
tions were made by men and women who were
at work, but could ill spare any portion of their
earnings, in the dead of winter, to support others
in idleness. The managers of the corporation,
for their part, insisted that they must be gov-
erned solely by the competition in the market,
and by their apprehensions of more trouble in the
future, under the proposed new tariflF. Considera-
tions of humanity, or the general welfare of the
city, cut no figure in the controversy. They were
either wholly ignored, or were deemed to have no
application to the case.
Finally, after much weariness and suffering, the
State Board, on May 4, was requested by repre-
sentatives of the striking operatives to attempt a
settlement on the basis of a return to work, on the
company's terms, of all the former employees,
without discrimination. This suggestion was at
once communicated to the treasurer, who said that
the mill was running with a reduced force, and that
he would agree to hire only those who were needed.
;
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 33
On the following day the Board went to Lawrence,
met the mayor and the executive committee of the
strikers, and, after trying in vain once more for
some concession from the agent, advised the com-
mittee to have the strike declared oflF without any
delay, which action was accordingly taken on the
same day. Some of the operatives were re-em-
ployed on the Monday next following, and others
were subsequently hired; but many of the former
employees, driven by necessity, or discouraged by
the protracted strike, had already left the city or
obtained work elsewhere.
34 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb,
WAMSUTTA MILLS — NEW BEDFORD.
A strike of weavers employed in mill No. 6 of
the Wamsutta Mills, New Bedford, upwards of
one hundred and eighty in number, occurred on
February 13, notice having been given that one
week later wages would be reduced, but instead
of running forty hours a week only, the mills
would run on full time for five days in each week.
On the 21st, after notifying the parties, the Board
went to New Bedford and learned from both sides
the situation of affairs. A limited number of
weavers had been obtained, but not sufficient for
the profitable operation of the mill in question, one
hundred looms only being in operation.
It appeared that in August, 1893, there was a
cut in wages amounting to about thirteen per
cent., under which, in fifty-eight hours, the
weavers were able to earn about $7.30 on an
average ; that on Feb. 12, 189 J:, notice was posted
that the wages would be further reduced on six
different classes or styles of goods, the change to
take effect on the 20th, and amounting, on an
average, to about eleven and one-half per cent.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 35
This reduction would diminish the earnings to an
average of about $6.50. The strike followed in
mill No. 6, but the weavers in mill No. 1 remained
at work under a similar reduction which affected
their earnings on one class of goods. It also
appeared that cuts had been lengthened, and both
men and women were expected to operate more
looms than formerly. The agent of the mills said
that no concession would be made, and that the
new prices would bear comparison with those
paid by other mills for similar work. He said
also that the weavers had understated the amount
which could be earned by them under the new
list. The weavers appeared to be determined not
to work at the proposed wages, and under the
circumstances it was impossible to effect any
settlement.
On February 26, all the mills of the corporation
started on full time, except No. 6, which by reason
of the strike was shut down, and remained in that
condition. Under ordinary circumstances this mill
gave employment to about seven hundred workers.
The question of a strike in the other mills of the
corporation was mooted, but on March 19 the
weavers of the other mills voted to remain at work.
Mill No. 6 was started on April 9, with a full
force, except in the weave-room, where only a few
36 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
weavers were employed. The want of workers in
this department led the corporation to transfer to
other mills goods which had hitherto been made in
mill No. 6. Another attempt was made to induce
a general strike of weavers in all the mills of the
corporation. The attempt was unsuccessful, but
the difficulties of the situation compelled the shut-
ting down of this mill about May 10.
At length, in the last days of June, a delegation
of women, who were weavers, but, as it appears,
not representing the union, called upon the agent,
and arrangements were made for their return to
work under the wages and conditions which were
in vogue when they left work. The weavers who
composed this delegation were promptly expelled
from the weavers' union, the arrangement for re-
suming work was repudiated by the organization,
and everything remained substantially as before,
until the general strike which occurred on August
20, affecting most of the mills of the city and caus-
ing & general suspension of the manufacture of
cloth goods.
An account of the larger controversy is given in
another part of this volume.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 37
SHAW STOCKING COMPAmT— LOWELL.
A letter was received on February 26 from a
committee representing men lately employed as
"boarders'' by the Shaw Stocking Company of
Lowell, who were then on strike against a reduc-
tion in wages. In response to the request con-
tained in the letter, the Board went to Lowell on
the 28th, and after an interview with the committee,
called upon the treasurer and other officers of the
corporation, to see whether any settlement could
be eflfected that would enable the strikers to resume
their work.
It appeared that the strike occurred on January
30, and involved thirteen young men, all unmarried,
save one. They were willing to return to work at
the reduced prices, provided the company would
pay for the turning, as it was then doing for the
new employees. The company, however, although
its loss by the strike had been severe, professed to
be satisfied with the new hands, and would not
under any circumstances discharge them in order
to make room for the strikers. Under the circum-
stances, the Board saw no reason to expect that
38 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
the former employees would be likely to be re-em-
ployed in that mill, and advised them to find other
work.
On March 8, the Board was informed that the
men then in the employ of the company as boarders
had struck two days before. The Board there-
upon, at the request of the former employees,
wrote to the manager of the company, Mr. Hooper,
stating what had been learned, and asking:
." Can we be of any use in getting back the old
employees? or, in other words, are there any terms
or conditions you can name, on which we can ad-
vise them to apply at your office for work?'' A
reply was received, dated March 16, stating the
facts of the case and the position of the company
as follows : —
The employees left us, as they had a i>erfect right to do,
and we in turn had employed others, as, undoubtedly, we
had a perfect right to do, and in neither case had either
party a right to interfere with the other. We accorded
them the same privilege that we claimed for ourselves.
We are now supplied with suflSicient help to do our work,
and do not need the services of those who left us ; there-
fore there are no terms or conditions on which we can
again employ the men who left us, as we should by so
doing be obliged to discharge the same number of men in
order to make places for those who did not care to stay
with us.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 39
ADVEBTISEB HEWSPAPEB COMPAKY - BOSTON.
In a case presented to the Board upon the joint
application of the Advertiser N'ewspaper Com-
pany, of Boston, and Typographical Union !N'o.
13, representing the compositors employed on the
"Boston Daily Advertiser" and the "Boston
Evening Record," the following decision was
rendered on April 21, 1894 : —
In ike matter of the joint application of the Advertiser News-
paper Company^ of Boston^ and its employees,
PsnTiow riLBD Fbbbvabt 27f 1894. Hbabiko, Apbil 16.
The petition presented in this case is whether certain
advertisements or " reading notices ^ printed in the
"Advertiser" and "Record," of which the one called
"Picturesque America" is agreed to be a fair specimen,
ought to be measured and paid for as * * agate " or
** minion," as between the compositors and their em-
ployer.
A printed ** scale of prices," agreed to Nov. 2, 1893,
was put in evidence, and the question turns on the proper
application to the facts in the case, of sections 9 and
10, under the head of " Advertisements," which are as
follows : —
40 BOARD OP ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Sect. 9. All paid reading notioes shall be measared the
same as advertisements, with the exception of those set in the
s&me type as the body of the paper.
Sect. 10. All advertisements, including office advertise-
ments, shall be measared as agate, except as provided for in
section 9.
It is agreed by the parties that ** Picturesque America '
is an << office advertisement," and must, under the scale
of prices, be measured as agate, unless it comes within
the exception which applies to advertisements or reading
notices *^ set in the same type as the body of the paper."
As the ** Advertiser" and the ** Record" are printed, the
" body of the paper" is minion, set with suitable head-
ings in a larger, heavier-faced type. The same kinds of
type are used in printing the advertisement in question,
but not only is the larger type used for one heading at
the top, but the larger type is also distributed through
the article in a manner calculated and actually intended
to attract the attention of the reader in the same manner
as attention is drawn to displayed advertisements for
which the higher price is paid without question. The
compositors contend that the arrangement of type and
the whole character of the article make it clear that
it is not set ^< in the same type as the body of the paper,"
although the same types are in fact found there.
The Board, having carefully considered the question
presented, is of the opinion that the exception in sections
9 and 10 was not intended to cover advertisements or
notices of the general character and arrangement of type
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No, 40. 41
that appears in these articles, and that, in accordance with
the agreed scale of prices, the articles in question ought
to be measured as agate.
By the Board,
Bebnabd F. Supple, Olerh.
Remit. The decision was accepted and applied
by the parties concerned.
42 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
ABLINGKFOir HILLS — LAWBENCB.
The Board being credibly informed on March
12, that, by reason of a strike of the dyers and
finishers, the Arlington Mills, of Lawrence, had
shut down, on the day next following went to
Lawrence, called upon the mayor, and through
his courtesy were enabled to communicate with a
committee of the strikers. It appeared that in
August a general reduction of wages had been
submitted to, the dyers and finishers only protest-
ing, for their wages were reduced ten per cent.
There was no difficulty, however, until early in
March, when, after some unsuccessful attempts by
a committee to settle the matter with the agent
of the mills, the dyers and finishers declared a
strike, and left work to the number of about three
hundred. The corporation, in order to force a
settlement, promptly on March 10 shut down all
departments of the mills, thus throwing about
twenty-five hundred employees out of work.
The workmen were found firmly insisting
upon the restoration of the ten per cent, re-
duction, but were nevertheless somewhat affected
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No, 40. 43
by the course of the corporation in locking out
the other operatives. After learning the views
of the committee, the Board called upon the
agent, at the mills, and heard his statement of
the matter, which did not differ materially from
what had already been learned. Having obtained
his consent to meet the committee of dyers and
finishers, with the State Board, a conference was
accordingly had on the same day, and the points
of the controversy were fully discussed in the
presence of the Board. In the course of the
discussion, the agent said, in answer to a ques*
tion from the Board, that he would be very glad
to have the employees return, but that he was
not at liberty, under his instructions from Bos-
ton, to concede more than had already been
granted, that is, six cents a day to those who
might be entitled to it, on the ground that be-
fore the reduction in August the dyers and fin-
ishers had in some instances received sixty hours'
pay for fifty-eight hours' work. The Board
thereupon, in the presence of both parties, ad-
vised the committee to return to their associates
and report, as the advice of the Board, that the
best course would be to pass a vote that, in
accordance with the advice of the State Board,
they were willing to return to work at once, and
44 BOAED OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
refer the question of wages to the Board. This
advice was coupled with the statement that then
the Board would make a careful comparison of
the proposed wages with wages paid in other
woollen mills in Massachusetts. It was further
recommended that, in case such a vote should be
passed, it should at once be communicated to
the agent, with a request that the corporation
would agree to join in submitting the case to
the State Board. The agent then said, in reply
to a question from the Board, that he did not
care to pledge himself in advance, since it was
uncertain what the action of the employees would
be ; but, should the operatives accept the sug-
gestion offered by the Board, he should have no
objection to leaving the case in the hands of the
Board ; but he added that the comparison of
prices ought, in his opinion, to be confined to
the Pacific Mills, of Lawrence, the nearest com-
petitor. On this point the workmen expressed a
desire for a more extended investigation, but this
point was expressly deferred for after considera-
tion, in case everything else went right. The
committee undertook to place the matter before
the operatives at once, and to keep the Board
advised of what should be done. The operatives
met and acted in accordance with the sugges-
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 45
tions of the Board, but on the next day, the
14th, the treasurer called upon the Board, in
Boston, and said that a draft of a proposed
agreement had been submitted by the committee,
which did not altogether meet with his approval,
and after some conversation, he said that he
would make a new draft and send it to Lawrence.
The operatives were surprised by what seemed
to them a change of attitude on the part of the
company, but the Board advised them to wait
patiently for the proposition which was to come
from the treasurer.
On the 16th, however, the agent of the mills
and the committee agreed upon a settlement of
the whole controversy, and work was resumed
in all departments. Of this result the Board
was duly notified on the same day. The Board
was not informed of the terms of the settle-
ment, but they were obviously pleasing to the
employees, and the corporation appeared at all
times anxious to have the difficulty settled as
promptly as possible.
46 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb,
HEBBUCACK woolen mills — DRiLOUr.
On March 15, the Board received a letter from
the secretary of the executive committee of opera-
tives lately employed in the Merrimack Woolen
Mills, at Dracut, requesting the services of the
Board in that place. In response to this applica-
tion, the Board went to Dracut on the 19th, met
the committee, and afterwards the agent of the
company.
It appeared that the strike took place on March
12, all the employees, about two hundred and
seventy-five in number, quitting their work. The
cause was a general reduction, averaging about
fifteen per cent. Notice had been given that rents
and board in the corporation boarding-houses
would also be reduced fifteen per cent. It was
also announced that the weavers and spinners
would be expected to work eleven hours a day, or
sixty-three and one-half hours a week. The oper-
atives protested both against the reduction and the
overtime work. The agent said that he must insist
upon the extra time, but should expect to pay for all
the time actually employed. After ftirther conver-
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 47
Bation the Board reported to the committee that
they were authorized by the agent to say that, if the
employees saw fit to return in a body under the
new scale of wages, Mr. Fels, the agent, would
consider the wagps of the men who were reduced
from $1.10 to 95 cents, and, as soon as he could
bring it about, would raise them to a dollar a day ;
and when times should be better, and higher prices
for goods should be established in the market, he
should expect to pay higher wages all around,
reference being had to the wages paid by other
woolen mills. The Board added that they were
unable to hold out any hope of a concession as to
the hours of work; but in view of the assurances
actually given by the agent, the committee were
advised to report the facts to the whole body of
operatives, who were to meet on the following
morning, and if they, in the exercise of their best
judgment, should see fit to accept the situation and
return to work, to do so under the advice of the
State Board, and the agent would receive them as
before. The operatives, for reasons which seemed
good to them, decided to continue the strike, in the
hope of obtaining better terms. A letter from the
secretary announced this conclusion, and asked for
the views of the Board, which were to some extent
expressed in the following letter: —
48 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Boston, March 22, 1894.
George F. Sparks, Secretary^ representing striking employees of
Merrimack Woolen MUls, Dracut,
Sib : — Your letter of the 20th instant is received, and
the Board regrets to learn that the strike is still unsettled.
No doubt the operatives fully understand that the Board
made no decision, and certainly did not in any way give
its approval to the terms offered as being in every respect
what it might wish them to be. After an interview with
Mr. Fels the Board was authorized to say to your com-
mittee, and did say, that *<if the employees see fit to re-
turn in a body under the new scale of wages, Mr. Fels
will consider the wages of the men who were reduced
from $1.10 to 95 cents, and as soon as he can bring it
about will raise them to a dollar a day ; and when times
are better, and higher prices for goods are established in
the market, ho will expect to pay higher wages all around,
reference being had to the wages paid by other woolen
mills.''
Upon inquiry made since the receipt of your letter, the
Board is informed that, although some operatives have
since been hired and more are expected soon, the super-
intendent's offer still holds good, and all the former
employees will be received back on the terms above
expressed. The Board regrets to say that the require-
ment as to hours is still insisted upon, although your
objections to overtime work have been presented to the
superintendent as strongly as the members of the Board
felt authorized to express themselves.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 49
The opinion of the Board is that you cannot by remain-
ing out get any better terms, and therefore it fails to see
what good is to be gained by prolonging the controversy.
As was stated to your committee on Monday, the Board
has no power to compel any one, and does not wish to
urge any one verj' much to accept terms which are di^
tasteful; but the Board is assured that the concessions
proposed by Mr. Fels will be carried into eflFect in a very
short time, and it only remains to say that if at any time
after work is resumed and everything going on as usual,
you have any complaint to make or request to offer, it
can be done under more favorable circumstances when
everybody is at work. For when you are at work, and
any difference arises with your employer, you will have a
right by law to notify the State Board, whose duty it will
be to investigate the case fully and say what is fair under
all the circumstances, due regard being had for the rights
and wishes of all concerned.
The Board desires that you will read this letter at a
meeting of all the operatives interested, in order that they
may know exactly how the Board stands in reference to
the matter.
Bespectfully,
Bernabd F. Supple,
Clerk.
The principal objection of the operatives was
to the extra time. They said that if the store-
house was full of manufactured goods, as the
50 BOARD OF ARBITEATION- [Feb.
agent represented, and no call for goods in the
market, they could not understand why the opera-
tives should be required to work overtime. In
spite of elaborate explanations, the Board was
also unable to understand this, for, although by
running the machinery an additional hour per day
the cuts would cost the company a few cents less
per yard, yet, if there was no market for the
goods, it was difficult to see how any perceptible
advantage was gained.
No action was taken by the operatives on the
Board's letter of March 22. After conferring
with the owner of the mill, the agent proposed to
take back the operatives at the former wages,
until the orders that were on hand at the begin-
ning of the strike should be filled. The strike
had lasted four weeks, everybody was tired of it,
and the proposition was accepted, the mill starting
up on April 10.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 51
ETJBEKA. SILK COMPANY -CANTON.
On March 15, a strike occurred on the part of
employees of the Eureka Silk Company, at Can-
ton. On the same day, a committee called upon
the Board in person, stated the facts of the case,
and requested the intervention of the Board. On
March 21, the Board went to Canton, met the
employees, and afterwards the superintendent, at
the factory.
It appeared that the cause of the strike was a
general reduction amounting to ten per cent. The
strike began with the cleaners and winders in mill
No. Ij where wages had been reduced, some from
$1 to 90 cents per day, some from 90 to 80 cents?
and others from 75 to 65 cents. Piece work was
offered, with a guaranty that the earnings should
amount to from $1 to $1.25; but the girls refused
to work by the piece under any conditions. Then
all the employees in mills No. 2 and No. 3 quit
work. At the time of the Board's visit, the
spoolers were working in mill No. 1, together
with six girls who had returned to work after
striking. Some of the reelers had been discharged
52 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb-
for refusing to do the work of strikers, and the
other two mills were shut down. About three
hundred and twenty-five operatives were on strike,
and about one hundred and seventy-five at work.
The superintendent said that the reduction was
unavoidable, by reason of the unfavorable business
situation, but that, if the employees should see fit
to return to work, he would re-employ all, without
discrimination, and would raise wages as soon as
business should improve suflSciently to justify it,
and that he would be willing to refer any future
differences that might arise to the State Board.
A general meeting of the employees took place,
at which the Board was invited to be present and
give counsel. The situation was fully considered,
and at length it was unanimously voted, " That we
return to work to-morrow morning on the terms
proposed by the company, not because we think
the wages are enough, but acting under the advice
of the State Board of Arbitration, and with the
assurance and expectation that, when business
shall improve and the company is in a condition
to pay us our old wages, we shall have our former
wages restored to us." Before final action was
taken, the proposed vote was shown to the super-
intendent, who made no objection, and the mills
were opened on the following day, and in due
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 53
course of time were soon running in the usual
manner.
In the absence of any decided improvement in
business, no change in wages has since been made,
but work has been steady, and the Board has
received no complaints.
54 BOABD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
CHASE, MEBRITT & CO.— MEDWAY.
On March 19, a letter was received from Med-
way purporting to come from the employees
of Chase, Merritt & Co., and stating that there
was a difference between the firm and the em-
ployees concerning the wages paid in the Med-
way factory for heeling and treeing "stoga"
work, so called; that there had been an informal
agreement to leave the matter to the State
Board, but as the firm had failed to take any
definite action to that end, as was alleged, the
Board was requested to move in the matter.
After some delay, occasioned by illness of a
member of the Board, the Board communicated
with the firm, asking when it would be agreeable
to them to join in an application and have' a
day set for a hearing. The firm expressed
surprise that the employees had applied to the
Board, and appeared unwilling to join in such
application. The Board notified the representa-
tive of the employees, and advised him to see
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 55
some member of the firm without delay, and come
to a better understanding.
Subsequently the Board was notified that a
settlement had been effected by agreement of
the parties directly concerned.
56 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
BOYD & COBEY BOOT AJSTD SHOE MANnFACTlTB-
ING COMPAinr — MABIiBOBOUGH.
In a case presented on March 20, by the Boyd
& Corey Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Com-
pany, of Marlborough, and its employees, the fol-
lowing decision was rendered on May 25: —
In the matter of the joint applicaXion of the Boyd A Corey Boot
and Shoe Manufacturing Company^ of Marlboroughj and its
employees.
PBTITION FILED Maroh 20, 1894. HiARXKOS, APRIL 30, Mat 3, 4.
The application, as presented by the Boyd & Corey
Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Company, represents
that they and other shoe manufacturers in Marlborough
** are paying an excessive price for the McKay sew-
ing of their goods, — not that we claim our prices
are in excess of others in our vicinity, but rather
that the price is more than a fair average of the com-
pensation paid for the same skill and ability in other
departments of factory labor, and that they should be
made equal with them."
The employees, who were represented by John H,
Murray, joined in the application, and hearings were
had at Marlborough, at which workmen employed in
this factory and agents of the union appeared and were
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 57
heard on the question of a redaction. Several manu-
facturers of Marlborough also appeared and took an
active part in the discussion of the questions involved
in the case.
A desire was manifested on the part of the manufact-
urers to give to the hearing a broader scope than the
application would allow, and the Board ruled that the
case must be considered as arising between the Boyd &
Corey Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Company and its
employees, and must be decided as such; and then, if
the decision should be found in any way applicable to
other factories, it could be applied with due reference to
all the conditions. In this view, the evidence, arguments
and suggestions of the other manufacturers have been
considered by the Board only so far as they bore upon
the questions at issue between the Boyd & Corey Boot
and Shoe Manufacturing Company and its employees.
The issue thus raised is whether the prices now paid
for sewing on the McKay machine are higher than ought
in fairness to be paid. The company adduces evidence
of the amounts earned by operatives who actually worked
only seven and a half hours to eight and a half hours a
day, and says that, although they pay no more per dozen
than is paid by their competitors, yet that the amount
earned, taken in comparison with <<a fair average of the
compensation paid for the same skill and ability in other
departments of factory labor,'' is conclusive proof that
the price paid for McKay sewing is ** excessive," and
ought to be reduced.
58 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
At the hearing it was objected, on the side of the
workmen y that it would be unfair to them if the Board
should decide the case upon a mere comparison of the
earnings of the McKslj sewers with the earnings of the
other departments, for the reason that, even if the com-
parison should show that the wages of the McKay sewers
were higher than those of any other operatives, yet the
prices paid in such other departments might be as much
below the **fair average" which was urged by the com-
pany as the correct standard.
It was thereupon agreed, after full discussion, that the
Board should make this comparison as fairly and ac-
curately as the circumstances would permit, and should
also by the aid of expert assistants, in the manner pro-
vided by law, inform itself of the prices paid for McKay
sewing in other factories in which goods of a similar
quality were made, all the conditions being taken into
consideration, and then upon all the evidence and after
weighing the arguments on both sides, decide according
to justice and the merits of the case.
The parties and their witnesses have been fully heard,
and the Board by its sworn agents has supplemented the
information thus submitted by an investigation and in-
quiry in other factories which were suggested by one or
both of the parties interested.
As to the main contention of the company, that the
wages of the McKay sewers are disproportionately high
in comparison with the other departments of the factory
in question, the Board has taken for comparison a period
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 59
of six hundred and eleven hours, that is, the running
time of the fiictory for certain consecutive days, and
during that time it appears that the men employed as
fair-stitchers, edge-trimmera and edge-setters, in each of
those departments earned on an average more per hour
than the average earnings per hour of the McKay sewers
in the same time. Therefore, even if the Board thought
it safe, in any event, to base a decision upon a comparison
of this kind, the evidence in this case would not, in the
opinion of the Board, warrant it in recommending the
reduction that is claimed. A broader view of the case,
as one which may affect the trade generally, brings us to
the comparison which is usually made in determining
questions of wages. In such cases the question hereto-
fore invariably asked, and discussed on both sides, has
been. What do our competitors pay for the same work ?
or, What is paid in other factories which make goods
similar to the goods in the factory in question? The
Board still thinks that this is the only practical and safe
standard to apply, and that to introduce any other
standard that is limited in its application to the par-
ticular case before the Board, and not yet approved by
general consent of those most interested, would tend to
confusion and uncertainty, and might work injustice to
many people. Upon this branch of the Board's inquiry
it appears that in the majority of the factories referred
to by the parties in this case, outside of Marlborough, the
price paid per dozen is higher than in the factory of the
Boyd & Corey Boot and Shoe Manufacturing Company,
60 BOARD OF AEBITBATION. [Feb.
and in the others, the price paid produces earnings equal
to those in the factory of this company.
On this state of facts, although the earnings, speaking
in a general way and compared with some other kinds of
skilled labor, appear large, the Board is unable to see
how it can consistently recommend any reduction in the
present case. *
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple, Clerk.
Result The decision of the Board was ac-
cepted by all parties concerned.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 61
KING PHITiIP MILLS— FALL BIVEB.
On April 11, after two weeks' shut-down, the
weavers employed m mill No. 4 of the King Philip
corporation, at Fall River, finding that the wages
on some styles of goods had been reduced, went
on a strike. They were joined by the employees
in the carding room, about three hundred and
seventy-five in number, and subsequently by the
loom-fixers. All the mills of the corporation were
seriously impeded by the strike, and the difficulty
of obtaining new employees.
In answer to its communications the Board re-
ceived no encouragement to believe that anything
could be done towards effecting a settlement, and
the Board was too busy in other quarters to waste
time where its services were not desired. Later,
however, in July, when the controversy had
dragged through three weary months, and arbi-
tration of some sort was being suggested on one
side and on the other, the Board went to Fall
River and met by appointment a committee of
weavers, who, after reciting the history of the
trouble, expressed their willingness to return to
work and leave the question of prices to the in-
vestigation of the State Board.
62 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
An interview was then had with the treasurer of
the King Philip Mills, who confidently asserted
that the prices offered by him for weaving were
higher than those of his competitors in New Bed-
ford and Holyoke ; that he should stand by those
prices because they were favorable enough to the
operatives. He said further that he believed in the
principle of arbitration, and would have joined
with the weavers in submitting the case to the
Board, had such action been proposed by the
weavers before striking. A preference was ex-
pressed for his old employees, but he had no doubt
of his ability to fill all vacancies within a short
time at the reduced rates.
There was nothing to do but report the sub-
stance of the interview to the committee of the
strikers. They denied the statement as to the
prices offered, in comparison with other mills, and
instanced higher prices in Fall River on a poorer
grade of goods. Confidence was shown in their
ability to maintain the strike, and the matter was
not further considered by the Board as a separate
case. It was obscured by or became a part of the
general controversy which affected the whole city,
and was ended at the same time by the weavers
voting to return to work and declare the strike off.
This action was taken on October 29.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 63
J. W. WALCOTT & CO.— NATICK.
On or about April 17, a strike occurred on the
part of the lasters employed by J. W. Walcott &
Co., at Natick. The complaint was of low wages
and inadequate earnings. Several interviews took
place, before the strike, between the firm and com-
mittees of the employees, or representatives of the
lasters' union; but, after the strike, the firm ob-
jected on personal grounds to meeting the local
committee. On May 5, in default of a settlement,
the lasters were notified to remove their kits, and
thus sever their relations with the factory. Other
workmen were at once hired to fill the places
thus left vacant, and adtoions to the force were
made from time to time. On May 11 and 16, the
Board procured interviews with both parties. The
workmen appeared fixed in their determination to
compel the firm to recognize the local union. The
senior member of the firm said that at no time had
he refused to recognize the union, and until re-
cently had been willing to refer the matter to the
State Board; but the situation had changed, other
workmen had been employed, and he had made
64 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
arrangements to introduce lasting machines. Un-
der the circumstances he could not see that there
was anything for the Board to do in the premises.
Early in July the work of the factory was reported
to the Board as going on smoothly and satisfac-
torily to the firm, but no settlement had been
made by the union as such. The latest informa-
tion received is, in effect, that this state of things
has continued ever since, the firm having found
no difficulty in procuring a sufficient number of
workmen, including some of the former employees.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 65
IiOWELIi MAKUFACTUBING COMFAinr — LOWELL.
On May 3, the ingrain weavers, employed by
the Lowell Manufactui'ing Company in the manu-
facture of carpets, at Lowell, about six hundred
in number, went on a strike, demanding either
that the mills should run on full time, or that
wages should be restored to the figures which
were in vogue before the last reduction of ten
per cent. The agent of the mills undertook to
lay the matter before the treasurer and report the
decision; the weavers' committee never called at
the office to learn what the answer was, perhaps
guessing correctly that it was adverse to their
wishes; and the weavers left work on May 3.
A few days later the brussels weavers made
a similar demand. The mills, continued to run,
but with insufficient help, and it was understood
that a general shut-down was contemplated by
the manager of the corporation. Accordingly, on
the 18th, the Board, of its own motion, went to
Lowell and conferred with a committee of the
striking ingrain weavers, and also called at the
office of the mills.
66 BOAED OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
The weavers complained of two reductions of
recent date, amounting together to about seven-
teen per cent., and a shortening of the time to
thirty hours a week, by reason of which some
of them could not earn more than $2 a week,
— not enough to pay their board. They said
that they did not think much of strikes as a
means to an end, but that in this case they
certainly were not giving up much. The Board
was asked to see the treasurer and advise them
subsequently. At the mill office it was learned
that the combers and spinners had joined the
strike, although they had no grievance; that
some of the combers had returned, but about
one thousand employees in the ingrain depart-
ment, practically one-half, were still out.
On the following day the Board met the
treasurer and the agent, in Boston, and the
matter was fully discussed. Stress was laid upon
the light demand for carpets, by reason of the
hard times, and the uncertainties of tariff legis-
lation. It was likely that the brussels mill would
soon be shut down altogether, for want of orders,
and it was impossible to say when the ingrain
mill would be started up again. The treasurer
said that it was not worth while to discuss the
question of running time, for that would be easily
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 67
regulated by the demands of the business; that
the time could not be lengthened at present, nor
could the wages be increased until business was
better. The suggestion having been made that,
as it was impossible to say when the ingrain
mill would start up again, it might be the duty
of the Board to advise the weavers to find
work wherever they could, this suggestion was
not received favorably, and the treasurer then
said that the weavers might be needed in two
or three weeks.
At a meeting of the employees, held at Lowell
on the 24th, the substance of the interview with
the treasurer was reported to them by the Board.
The meeting subsequently voted to continue the
strike until the ten per cent, reduction should be
restored to them. On or about June 8, all depart-
ments of the mills were closed for an indefinite
time, and over two thousand operatives were idle.
In July the brussels weavers and the ingrain
weavers, acting separately, voted to return to
work on July 23, at the rate of wages received
at the time of the strike, and with the assurance
of the treasurer that the ten per cent, reduction
should be restored when the duty on wool was
removed. This increase was accordingly made
when the new tariff law took effect.
68 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
E. HODGE & CO.— BOSTOir.
On May 16, the boiler makers employed by E.
Hodge & Co., at East Boston, went on a strike,
because the firm refused to discharge a workman
who was obnoxious to them. On the 18th, in re-
sponse to the Board's circular, the manager called,
and stated that the strike was in direct contraven-
tion of a written agreement which he had made
with the union, on April 24, 1893, by the terms of
which it was expressly provided that the agreement
should remain in force for two years from May 1,
1893, either party to give the other three months'
notice of any desired change. He further said
that the only objection to the workman, so far as
he had been informed, was that he was not in good
standing with the union, although he had once
been a member.
The Board, having communicated with the
boiler-makers, received notice that the union would
act upon the subject at a meeting to be held on the
20th, and would then communicate further with
the Board. After the meeting, a committee called
upon the manager, and finding him firm in his de-
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 69
termination, turned their attention to the workman
who was the subject of the controversy, and after
a satisfactory arrangement had been made with
him as to payment of assessments in arrears, he
was allowed to return to membership. Then on the
22d, discipline having been administered, all hands
returned to work, and the business was allowed to
proceed.
70 BOARD OF ARBITRATION, [Feb.
TBAJrSGBIFT PITBLISHINa COIEFANY - HOLYOKE.
During the month of May, a very busy month
for the Board, attention was directed to a strike of
compositors then lately employed in the office of
the "Holyoke Transcript." The following state-
ment of facts, printed and circulated by the Typo-
graphical Union, was sent to the Board on May
19, and vouched for by the secretary-treasurer as
correct : —
Tuesday morning, May 8, the book, newspaper and job
compositors, and one union pressman, of the Transcript
Publishing Company, quit work in a body. In its issue
of that day, and upon several occasions since, the
** Transcript" gave misleading accounts of the strike and
of the causes that led up to it, wherefore the Typograph-
ical Union respectfully submits the following statement to
the people : —
In the summer of 1892 the "Transcript" office was
made a union one, the proprietor, W. G. Dwight, agree-
ing to employ only such compositors and pressmen as
were members of the Typographical Union. In return
for this, the firm was allowed the use of the union label,
which is given to any strictly union printing office. In
unionizing its office the «« Transcript" suffered no pecu-
1895.1 PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 71
niary loss, whilst the possession of the label enabled the
firm to feompete for the work of labor organizations that
generally desire the label on all their printed matter. At
that time there was no wage question at issue. A request
was made that the office employ union printers only, and
the petition was gitinted without objection. No wage
scale was brought in ; no promise was made concerning
one ; there was no understanding, express or implied, re-
garding any future action upon the wage question; the
office was made a union one, the matter ended.
In 1893, the local Typographical Union, acting accord-
ing to the laws of the International Typographical Union
of America, formulated a scale of prices, below which no
union compositor in this city should work. This scale
was submitted to the leading local printing offices. As it
was higher, in some instances, than the prices then being
paid, the << Transcript" declined to accept it, and in due
course, after a vote of the members as to whether they
should strike to enforce the scale, the matter was dropped.
Section 157 of the <:^onstitution of the International
Typographical Union says: "Subordinate unions are
recommended to annually present their scale of prices for
the employers to sign, which scale, when signed, shall be
binding on both parties during the year."
Accordingly, six weeks ago a scale was again presented
to the employing printers of the city. This time the
scale was almost entirely formal ; the wages mentioned in
it were a reduction from the previous scale, and were less
than some of the men actually received. The *«Tran-
72 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
script " was practically paying all that the scale demanded.
On only one point was there an increase, and that was
where overtime was charged for at the rate of time and
one-half. This scale was also refused, the refusal being
reported to a special meeting, held Sunday, 7th inst.
Following the usual course, a vote was taken to decide
whether or not the union would strike to enforce the scale
in the *« Transcript.*' The strike foiled to receive the per-
centage of votes necessary according to union laws, and
the whole matter ended so far as the «* Transcript" and
the union were concerned.
Meantime the scale committee, consisting of three men,
duly elected by the union to carry on negotiations with
the employing printers, had received the signatures of
these firms. This took place during the forenoon of
Monday, May 7. At one o'clock of the same day, the
scale committee returned to work in the «* Transcript"
office. They were not allowed to resume, being told by
their respective foremen that their services were no longer
required. In the evening a special meeting of the union
was held, every member, except two, being present. The
discharged men told their stories ; the whole case was thor*
oughly discussed, and a committee was appointed to wait
upon the proprietor and request the reinstatement of the
men dismissed. The following morning, the committee,
accompanied by an officer of the International Typo-
graphical Union, called upon the proprietor of the ** Tran-
script." He refused to reinstate the men ; said they had
been discharged because << they were too active in the scale
1895,] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 73
matter;^ farther, if the union wanted to strike, he was
ready for it, and would just as soon have a strike. See-
ing that argument was vain, and that there was only one
option, — either to desert the three men or to strike in
their defence, — the International officer, acting upon a
vote of the previous evening, ordered the *« Transcript"
force to quit work, and since then no union man has held
a situation in that office.
The foregoing is a true account of the events leading
up to the strike, and, in placing the statement before the
people, the Typographical Union desires to ask this
question : —
Does the &ct that a man has been << too active" in do-
ing certain union work constitute just cause for a dis-
missal from a situation, when such man has for years held
his position without any complaint being made against
him as to the quantity or quality of his work, or his atten-
tion to it ?
We submit it does not. We urge that the action of the
** Transcript" was unnecessary and unjustifiable; that
the dismissal of men for being «*too active" in union
afiairs was a violent form of dictation in matters that did
not concern the ** Transcript; " that it was an outrage not
only against the first principles of unionism, but against
every sentiment of fair play as between man and man ;
and that it was in direct contravention of the law of this
State, which declares that no man shall be punished or
discriminated against because he belongs to a labor union
or is '< active " in its affairs.
74 BOAED OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
The present fight is not of the printers' choosing.
That they were desirous of avoiding trouble is clearly
shown by the fact that they twice refused to strike upon
the wage question, they made no attempt to interfere with
the proprietor's legitimate rights in the ** running" of
his business, so that the strike is the direct outcome of
the action of the ** Transcript,'' which, without just cause,
made an attempt to punish three men, and aimed, through
them, a deadly blow at the printers' organization. Under
such provocation the Typographical Union struck, and we
believe fair-minded people will say that we took a manly
and proper stand.
Whilst the Typographical Union has no desire to pro-
long this struggle, yet it is determined to protect itself
from an onslaught so unjust. Therefore we make this
statement to the people, and appeal to them for their
moral support and sympathy, folly believing that the
justice of our cause merits all we ask.
In his letter to the Board the secretary-treas-
urer expressed the opinion that the only way
in which the difficulty could be settled would be
by the reinstatement of the three men who had
been discharged.
The Board then opened communication with the
office of the company by telephone, and after mak-
ing a brief statement of facts, which did not differ
materially from the statement printed above, the
manager of the newspaper said that he had then
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 75
fifteen men working for him, and was confident
of his ability to procure others when he needed
them; that he had discharged the three men
for reasons which he considered good. Being
asked whether he thought a visit from the Board
would be likely to result in effecting a settle-
ment, no encouragement was offered by him on
that head. The colloquy was then brought to a
close by a statement that the Board did not wish
to waste time in going such a distance for noth-
ing, but that whenever either one or both of
the parties desired its presence in Holyoke the
Board would go there, and at least make an
attempt at conciliation. The same message was
in substance given to the secretary-treasurer of
the union. Neither party expressed such a
desire, and the controversy drifted along, with-
out result. The company succeeded in obtain-
ing a sufficient number of workmen on terms
mutually satisfactory. No agreement has been
made with the union, but the office is open to
all compositors, whether they are members of
the union or not.
76 BOAED OF AEBITRATION. [Feb.
NEWTON MHiS- NEWTON,
On May 17, about one hundred and thirty
girls employed as spinners in the silk mills at
Newton Upper Falls struck against reduced
wages and short running time. By this action
about sixty men, who were also working under
a reduction, were deprived of work. Full work-
ing time was offered by the superintendent; but,
the girls refusing to return to work under the
reduced wages, they were paid off. Some, how-
ever, came back and were employed in finish-
ing goods on hand. On the 24th, thirty or more
of the girls thought fit to go to Boston and call
at the State House for the purpose of laying
their grievances before the Governor, but he
was absent, and the demonstration produced no
effect. On that day, however, the men, about
seventeen in number, who were then at work in
the mills, quit work and joined the strike. The
operations of the mills were thus practically
brought to an end. The operatives at different
times sought the Governor of the State, a£Sli-
ated themselves with the American Federation
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 77
of Labor, and put themselves under the advice
and leadership of the Women's Industrial and
Educational League, in Boston; but it seems
never to have occurred to them or their ad-
visers to consult the State Board, which was
created for just such emergencies.
On the 24th and 25th, however, the Board
sought to put itself in communication with the
parties. The employees complained mainly of
the reduction, and were willing to go to work
on the short time, provided the former rate of
wages was restored. The employers proposed to
start the mills on the 28th on full time at the
reduced wages, but receiving no encouragement,
the following notice was posted on the mill
gates : —
Notice is hereby given to the employees of Newton
Mills that the finishing room and dye house will
resume operations whenever a sufficient number of the
help are willing to return to work at the present rate
of wages. All the other departments will remain
closed down until the tariff question has been settled.
A few days later, at the request of the em-
ployees' representatives, the Board sent its
printed circular and a blank application to the
firm of William Ryle & Co , of New York, who
78 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
were understood to be the owners of the New-
ton Mills, hoping in this way to suggest the
desirability of a settlement of the dispute by
arbitration. On June 4, the Board went to
Newton and met both parties or their repre-
sentatives. The operatives appeared to be as
firmly opposed as ever to working under the
reduction. The manager, on the other hand,
told the Board that, by the orders of the fiirni
in New York, the mill was shut down, and
would remain so until Congress should have
made some law aflfording adequate protection to
the industry of silk manufacturing; and that
under these circumstances he could not re-em-
ploy the hands at any rate of wages, or upon
any basis of running time, until new instructions
should be received from the firm.
Some time afterwards, during the summer, the
mills were opened, and a sufficient number of
employees were engaged, on the firm's terms, to
enable them to resume business.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 79
aEORQE a. SNOW -BROCKTON.
On May 24, a strike of Goodyear operators
occurred in the factory of George G. Snow, at
Brockton. They were soon joined by the McKay
sewers and fairstitchers, all being members of
the sole fasteners' nnion.
The wages paid to the Goodyear operators
were $3 and $3.50 by the day. The conten-
tion was for 2J cents per pair.
On June 7 the Board visited the city and
had an interview with the employer and with a
committee of the striking employees. The latter
were not inclined to welcome the advent of the
Board, and were not disposed to settle the dis-
pute by arbitration. They were informed that
the Board was there present not at anybody's
invitation, but acting in accordance with the law
of the State, and also that it was not necessary
for the Board to obtain the permission of the
parties to a controversy before making inquiry,
and attempting to effect a settlement. The com-
mittee then said that the case was in the hands
of the Shoe Council, so called, of Brockton, —
80 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
a body which purported to act for the union
workmen in all the factories of the city.
The manufacturer said that, at the piece price
demanded, the Goodyear operators could earn
$6 a day, and that rather than submit to it he
would give up business. While he was talking
with the Board the lasters were being dis-
charged, a course which the Board ventured to
suggest would only aggravate the difficulty.
After some conversation the employer said that
there was to be a meeting of the manufacturers
that evening for the purpose of trying to unite
upon some course of action, and after that he would
be wilhng to' agree to any fair method of settle-
ment, either by reference to the State Board or to
any fair third party. Before the Board left the
city they were pleased to learn by telephone from
the factory that arrangements had been made for
the return of the lasters. The Board gave no
formal advice, but urged caution and patience,
and, in the case of any joint action being de-
termined upon, the appointment of a committee
of manufacturers to confer with the representa-
tives of the union, before announcing any changes
as finally determined upon.
The representatives of the workmen were called
upon again, and similar suggestions were oifered
to them.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 81
Subsequently, on June 11, it was agreed to
leave the case to a local board of arbitration,
to consist of three persons. The employer selected
one and the union another, but the two thus
selected were never able to agree upon a third
arbitrator, and this attempt at arbitration by a
local board resulted in nothing.
In December, after a lapse of six months, the
workmen or their representatives proposed to re-
open the matter and make another attempt at set-
tlement by a local board of arbitration. The
employer replied that he was not willing to make
that attempt again, but if they desired he would
submit the matter to the State Board. Meantime
the questions in dispute remain undecided.
82 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
N. C. aRIFFIW— WAYLAND.
On May 28, having received notice in writing
of a strike of the lasters employed by N. C.
Griffin, at Cochituate, in the town of "Wayland?
the Board visited the place on the same day. A
conference was had between the employer and a
committee of the workmen, in the presence of the
Board. It appeared that the employer had decided
to introduce a new scale of prices for hand-lasting
or, as an alternative, to introduce the McKay-
Copeland machine. If he should continue to have
the work done by hand, all the workmen would
be retained ; but, with machines, it would be neces-
sary to discharge one-third of the number. The
strike of the lasters occurred on May 22.
At the conference all parties seemed to prefer
that the work should be done by hand, as before,
and therefore the only question was as to the
price. The difference was reduced to five cents
on a case of sixty pairs, and all parties appeared
to desire an amicable conclusion of the affair.
The matters in dispute were fully discussed, but,
since it appeared that the committee was not
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 83
authorized to agree to a settlement, the conference
vrss brought to an end with the understanding
that two members of the advisory board of the
union, who were present at the conference, would
endeavor to obtain the necessary sanction from
the advisory board, and confer again with the
employer on the following evening.
Within twenty-four hom's after the Board's visit
a settlement satisfactory to both sides was agreed
to. The use of the machines was discontinued,
and a price list for a year was agreed to and
signed.
84 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
GUYEB HAT COMPANY AND OTHERS — BOSTON.
In May last the hat manufacturers of Boston
presented to their respective employees a reduced
scale of wages, to take effect on June 1. The
reduction sought was about twenty per cent, for
finishing hats on lathes, which was comparatively
new work, and had been introduced on a basis
which would assure to the workmen, at the start,
earnings equal to what they had received for sim-
ilar work done by hand. It was claimed that the
prices then fixed were higher than for hand work,
and should therefore be reduced.
A general strike in the trade was threatened,
and on June 20, one of the manufacturers called
and informed the Board that negotiations between
the manufacturers and the hat finishers' union
were making slow progress towards a settlement.
He desired information concerning the law and the
methods pursued by the State Board, whose ser-
vices had been suggested at an early stage by the
manufacturers. The desired information was
given, with some suggestions of a general char-
acter encouraging a settlement by agreement if
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 85
possible. Subsequently it was reported to the
Board by the manager of the Guyer Hat Company
that the matters in dispute had been referred to
three men selected by the parties interested, whose
decision was accepted as a final settlement.
86 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
DBISCOLL & EATON -NATICK.
Early in June last, Driscoll & Eaton, of Natick,
shoe manufacturers, decided to introduce McKay-
Copeland lasting machines. The price paid for
doing the work by hand was 70 cents. The firm
gave the lasters an option of working by hand for
65 cents, or on the machine at 53 cents. The
workmen did not accept the oflFer, and others were
hired. An attempt was then made to establish a
price for treeing by machine, but the workmen
being unwilling to accept the price proposed, the
factory was closed.
The Board, being informed of the situation,
voted to go to N^atick and see the parties to the
dispute, on June 11, but on that day informa-
tion was received indirectly from the firm that
the factory would remain closed until July 1.
The visit of the Board was therefore deferred.
Towards the end of the month of June, the Board
was informed by the firm that their purpose was
to hire suitable men at union prices, but without
regard to membership in unions.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 87
The factory was soon afterwards opened, and
men were hired upon the plan indicated. Several
of the old employees returned to work, and a suf-
ficient number of new men were easily obtained, at
union prices.
88 BOARD OP ARBITRATION. [Feb.
E. F. SANBOBN - STONSHAM.
On June 14, the Board was informed by E. F.
Sanborn, of Stoneham, shoe manufacturer, that on
the day next preceding he had called his lasters
together and told them what he thought of their
demand for an increase of wages for lasting ; that
he had proposed to leave the question to the deci-
sion of the State Board, but the workmen seemed
unwilling to do so, and a strike was in prospect.
He was given information of a general nature
concerning the law and the methods of the Board.
Subsequently, after several interviews with the
agent of the lasters, an agreement was arrived at
and a price list posted accordingly. The agent of
the lasters afterwards informed the Board that the
workmen had no objection to the mediation of the
State Board, and desired that it should be so
stated in the annual report of the Board.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 89
BOCKLAITD COMPANY- BO GKL AND.
On June 26, notice was received from Eockland
that a strike had occurred in that town, involving
the Rockland Company and its lasters. The
Board on the following day went to Rockland and
called upon the respective parties. The represent-
atives of the workmen were not found, but in an
interview with Mr. Bates, agent of the company, it
was learned that, on or about May 1, he became
convinced that if he wished to remain in business
there must be a general reduction of wages. In
order, as he thought, to make the course clearer,
he discharged all the employees, and then oflFered
to hire them at the rates set dovm in a new sched-
ule. In consideration of the hard times, all ac-
cepted work under the terms proposed, except the
lasters. They were seventeen in number, and
declared a strike.
The company procured and set up Chase last-
ing machines, but, preferring to have the old
employees, proposed to hire as many as were
needed, if a fair price list could be agreed to.
Two lists were brought in by the secretary, but
90 BOARD OF ARBITEATION. [Feb.
they were rejected by the employer, and then
negotiations ceased. Operators from out of town
were hired to work on the machines, and at the
time of the Board's visit the work was reported as
going on satisfactorily to the company. It was
stated further that none of the new men would be
discharged in order to give another his place.
Recent information received from the factory is,
in eflFect, that the machines are still in use and give
good satisfaction. There has been no settlement
with the union, nor has there been any further
trouble.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 91
BICE & niJTCHINS — BOSTON.
On June 27, the superintendent of Rice &
Hutchins's shoe factory, in Boston, called upon
the Board with the representative of the lasters
employed in the factory, and presented informally
a difference which had arisen concerning the price
paid for lasting of Goodyear work. The Good-
year machine had been recently introduced, and
the price set by the superintendent covered the
work of lasting, laying the outer sole, filling, and
pulling lasts. The lasters desired a price set for
lasting alone, and they and the superintendent had
been unable to agree upon a price. The matter
was fully discussed with the Board, and conces-
sions were proposed on both sides, but no agree-
ment reached. The parties separated upon the
Board's suggestion that the workmen's represent-
ative consult further with the lasters, and confer
again with the superintendent. Subsequently the
Board was notified that the matter was settled.
92 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
SHIP CABFENTEBS AKD CAXTLEEBS — BOSTON.
In June last the master shipwrights of Boston
notified their employees that it would be necessary
to reduce their wages from $3.50 a day to $3 a
day. The carpenters and caulkers replied that
they could not agree to the proposed reduction.
On July 2, at a meeting of the employers, at
which were represented most of the master ship-
wrights of the city, it was decided to make the
proposed reduction, and notice to that effect was
sent to the representatives of the workmen. The
result was, that they did not go to work the next
day, regarding themselves as " locked out." Some
employers, however, retained their employees at
the former rate of wages, and in some of the
shops affected a limited number of men was found
working, but in most of the shops there was not
much work to be done at any price.
Negotiations were had between the parties, with
a view to a settlement; but things drifted along,
without anything definite being accomplished, imtil
July 14, when the State Board was requested by
interested persons to attempt to adjust the diffi-
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 93
culty. On the 17th, the Board went to East
Boston and learned that all differences had been
settled by agreement, except the matter of the
reduction of wages. Upon that point it appeared
that there was no work to be done, except "at
odd jobs," and that such work, when it was done,
was paid for at the former rate of $3.50 a day.
There appeared to be nothing for the Board to do,
and no further action was desired -by the parties
on either side.
94 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
irOBTH WOBUEW STREET RAILWAY COMPANY —
WOBURN.
During the winter and spring the employees of
the North Woburn Street Railway Company sub-
mitted to the officers of the corporation a request
for higher wages, and for certain changes in the
rules governing employees. The latter were mem-
bers of the Lynn and Chelsea Street Railwaymen's
Union, No. 6169, and the changes desired were
expressed in the following application, which was
presented . to officers of the road by the business
agent of the union, W. H. Sharp, with a request
that the company would agree in writing to the
propositions there set forth: —
To the President and Directors of the North Woburn Street RaUway
Company,
Gentlemen : — The following articles of mutual inter-
est are hereby presented for your consideration : —
We request: (1) that conductors and drivers shall
receive $2 per day ; (2) that ten hours shall constitute
a day's work, to be done inside of twelve consecutive
hours, and no time to extend over the twelve hour
limit; (3) that no deduction shall be made in any man's
pay when two or less trips are taken off of a day's
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 95
work; (4) that nine hours and a fraction constitute a
full day's work on a car; (5) that four hours and a frac-
tion shall constitute a full half day; (6) that the driver
may drop his pole and let it drag on any occasion; (7)
that the preference for work be given to the oldest men in
the employ of the company first ; (8) that no trip be run
after midnight for less than fifty cents, and all trips
taking more than one and one-half hours shall be paid
for at the rate of twenty-five cents per hour; (9) that,
if men be ordered to report at any time, they shall
receive twenty cents per hour until dismissed; (10) that
no man shall be laid off more than one day for missing
his car, all misses to be blotted out at the end of each
year; (11) that snow-plough drivers and leveller drivers
shall receive, for all time detained at the stable, or while
on duty, twenty-five cents per hour, and all helpers
twenty cents per hour; (12) that regular employees have
the preference for snow and track work; (13) that no
plough shall be sent out with less than four men, includ-
ing drivers; (14) that hostlers and feeders shall have a
half day off every third Sunday without loss of pay;
(15) that hostlers and feeders shall receive not less than
$1 per day, and no more work than they are now doing,
not to exceed sixteen horses and hitching, and that ten
hours constitute a day's work; (16) for lamp cleaning
and general work the pay shall not be less than $9 per
week, at ten hours each day; (17) that any man per-
forming the work of a man receiving better pay than he
shall receive the pny of the man holding that position ;
96 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
(18) that watchmen shall receive $12 per week; (19)
that blacksmiths receive $2.25 per day of not more than
ten hours; (20) all track laborers shall receive $2 per
day of nine hours; (21) that the company recognize an
agent, to be chosen by the men, whose duty it shall be
to represent the men in the settlement of grievances that
may arise between the company and the employees, said
agent to be recognized as the official who shall make all
complaints and grievances; (22) that all employees shall
be members of one union ; (23) that this agreement shall
remain in force for one year after date of its acceptance
by the company.
No satisfactory reply was received from the
president, and on July 3 substantially all the em-
ployees went on a strike. This action followed,
and it is to be presumed was dictated by, the fol-
lowing letter, which was printed in the daily
papers two days after the strike began : —
To the employees of North Wohum Street Bailway Company^ Members
of 6169.
Brothers: — I have, in pursuance of your instruc-
tions, waited upon A. F. Breed and E. ۥ Foster, and
I am exceedingly sorry to say that they absolutely refused
to do anything on your contract.
In accordance with your vote to refuse to work the
cars of the company, there seems to be no other course
to pursue than to tie up the whole system.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 97
As fast as you bring your cars to the house stop work
and remain away from the property of the company until
your right to organize is conceded, and until this com-
pany can be brought to understand that a living wage is
all you require for an honest day's labor. I will be with
you this evening. Be orderly, and stick together in this
contest.
W. H. Sharp,
Boom 12 y Abbott Building , Lynn.
On July 6, the Board made inquiry into the
controversy, and found that no cars were running,
and the business of the road was at a standstill.
The next day the Board invited representatives
from both sides to meet at the rooms of the Board,
for the purpose of conferring together with a view
to a settlement of the dispute by agreement. This
invitation was responded to by the president of
the company on the one side, and the agent of the
union on the other. '
The demands of the employees were reiterated,
and the president said that the business of the
road would not permit of any increase in the
expenses. Concessions were oflfered, but not agreed
to. The president then proposed to leave the
case to the State Board, and said he was willing
to submit the books to the inspection of the Board.
To this the agent replied that he would consult
98 BOARD OP ARBITRATION. [Feb.
the union. Subsequently it was learned that the
employees were not inclined to settle the matter
in the manner proposed.
The strikers procured and drove barges over
the line of the road, of which at first the people
of the neighborhood availed themselves as a tem-
porary accommodation. When, however, it was
learned that the company had proposed arbitration
and that the oflfer had not been favorably con-
sidered by the employees, the patronage of the
public was promptly withdrawn, and the drivers
of the barges began to feel the eflfects of public
disapproval of their course. After a very short
interval, that is, on the 12th, the Board was noti-
fied by the agent of the union that the employees
were disposed to accept the proposal for arbitra-
tion. On the following day another conference
was had in the presence of the Board, which re-
sulted in the signing of a joint application, with
the understanding that the men were to return to
work forthwith.
The operations of the road were at once re-
sumed, and the Board proceeded to hear the
parties and decide the questions submitted. In
due time the following decision was rendered on
August 1 : —
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 99
Jn the matter of the joint application o/ th^ North Wobum
Street Railway Company and its employees.
Petition pilbd July 13. Hbabimos July 25, 27
The application in this case grew out of the refusal of
the corporation to agree to the articles of a proposed
agreement presented by the agent of the employees last
spring, the main object of which was to establish a higher
rate of wages and certain rules relating to the duties of
the employees in their several departments of work. The
officers of the road insisted at all times that the business
of the corporation would not allow of any increase in
the running expenses, that in point of fact they were not
earning enough to pay the running expenses and interest
on borrowed money. This answer was not deemed suffi-
cient by the employees, and they struck on July 3. No
attempt was made to run the cars, but on July 13, through
the intervention of the State Board, both parties were
induced to agree to leave the matters in dispute to the
State Board, and allow the public to be accommodated
again in the usual manner by the running of cars. The
employees returned to their work, a hearing was had, and
the several articles in the proposed agreement were laid
before the Board and fully discussed pro and con by
the officers of the road and the representatives of the
employees.
The Board having duly considered all the questions
presented makes the following recommendations : —
100 BOARD OF ARBrTRATION. [Feb.
1. That conductors and drivers be paid at the rate of one
dollar and seventy-five cents per day.
2. That nine hours and any fraction of an hour shall entitle
a man to receive a full day's pay, and for four hours and a
fraction, half a day's pay.
8. That in the assignment of work the preference be given
to those who have been longest in the employ of the company,
their fitness and all other considerations being equal.
4. That for all trips made after twelve o'clock, midnight,
conductors and drivers shall be paid at the rate of twenty-five
cents per hour.
5. That when men are ordered to report at a certain time
for extra duty, they shall be paid at a rate of not less than
seventeen and one-half cents per hour, after the first half hour,
until dismissed.
6. That when a man misses his car and reports withm half
an hour, he shall go to the foot of the spare list for that day,
and shall not for that reason be laid off on the day following.
In other respects the rule shall remain as at present.
7. That snow-plough and leveller drivers shall receive
twenty-five cents per hour and helpers twenty cents per hour,
while employed on snow work.
8. That hostlers, feeders and watchmen shall receive one
dollar and forty-three cents per day.
Of the other regulations proposed, some were aban-
doned at the hearing, and others simply expressed the
way in which the business is now conducted; therefore
it is not deemed necessary to mention them more par-
ticularly in this decision. It may be stated in a general
way that the Board does not recommend any change in
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 101
the present relations between the company and its em-
ployees, except as is stated above.
By the Board,
Bebnard F. Supple, Clerk.
Result. The agent of the union saw fit to
express publicly his dissatisfaction with the
Board's views of the case; but the decision was
cheerfully accepted and acted upon by the cor-
poration and the employees, with general satisfac-
tion on the part of those immediately concerned.
102 BOABD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
ASHLAND SHOE AND LEATHEB COMFAKY—
ASHTiAND.
On July 13, independent applications were re-
ceived from the Ashland Shoe and Leather Com-
pany and the treers in its employ, stating that the
company had proposed lower prices for treeing,
but that the employees declined to accept the re-
duction. The two applications were filed together
and treated as one joint application, relating to the
same subject matter. A hearing was had on the
16th, and expert assistants appointed, with instruc-
tions to make the usual inquiries.
On August 8, when the expert assistants were
ready to report, the president of the company
informed the Board that he had decided to change
materially the method of treeing in his factory.
The report of the expert assistants was therefore
deferred and further consideration of the case as
presented was postponed, in order that the em-
ployees might learn what changes were proposed.
The Board next heard from the case in the form
of a letter from the workmen, received September
17, requesting that the Board would proceed to
decide the case as it had been presented to the
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 103
Board. The employer was promptly notified and
asked to define his position in relation to the
matter. On September 24, he notified the Board
that he had proposed prices for his new method,
under which less work was required, and had fixed
prices, at which the men refused to work. He
expressed a desire that the Board would pass upon
the question of the prices for the work as modi-
fied. The Board thereupon set a time for a hear-
ing and notified the parties, but as it appeared that
the new method was not yet actually in use in the
factory, the hearing was postponed until it should
be introduced and in actual operation.
At the same time it was agreed in the presence
of the Board that the work should at once be done
according to the new method, and that the work
should be paid for on account according to the
prices offered by the company, until the decision
of the State Board should be rendered; that, if
the effect of the decision was to increase the
wages, the men were to receive the difference for
back work, and if the Board should report lower
prices than those offered by the company, the dif-
ference should be deducted from their pay roll.
A further hearing was had on November 2, and
on November 19 the following decision was
rendered : —
104 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
In the matter of the joint application of the Ashland Shoe and
Leaiher Company^ of Ashland^ and the treers in its employ.
Petition filed July 13, 1894. Hbakinos, July 16, NoTSMBBa 2.
The controversy in this case arose from a desire on the
part of the company to lessen the labor cost of its prod-
ucty in order to meet competitors in the market for a
cheap grade of work. With this end in view, the method
of treeing shoes has been changed in some respects, and
lower prices offered. The Board is requested by the
company and its employees, jointly, to pass upon the
case as finally presented, and fix fair prices for the work
as it is now done under the new requirements.
After hearing the parties and making the usual investi-
gation, the Board recommends that the following prices
be paid in the factory of the Ashland Shoe and Leather
Company, at Ashland : —
■ Treeing by Hand.
psB U PAisa.
Unlined kip and split, . . . . . • • . |0.28
All oil grain shoes, inclading kip top, .10
Durham and Pilgrim stock, .13
Flesh split lined shoes, .18
By agreement of the parties, the above prices are to
take eflTect from Oct. 1, 1894.
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple,
Cflerk.
Result. The decision was accepted and acted
upon by all parties concerned.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 105
CHASE, MEBBITT & CO. — MABLBOBOUGH AND
MEDWAY.
On July 17, the Board received an application
signed by Chase, Merritt & Co., and setting forth
a difference between the firm and their lasters in
Marlborough and Medway concerning prices for
work done on the Consolidated Hand-Method last^
ing machine and the Chase lasting machine, also
for tacking on soles. The firm desired to estab-
lish two grades of prices, corresponding with the
work to be done. The lasters employed at Marl-
borough joined in the application, acting by their
agent, but the application was not joint as to the
Medway employees. Also, since it appeared that
there were two factories covered by the applica-
tion, one of which was operated under the name
of the Medway Boot and Shoe Company, it was
suggested that there ought to be two separate
applications. The firm then framed a new appli-
cation relating to the Medway factory alone, and
requested that the first application be amended by
striking out all reference to the Medway factory.
In the subsequent proceedings it was treated as
106 BOARD OP ARBITRATION. [Feb.
amended accordingly. Subsequently the Board
was informed that the controversy at Medway
had been settled by agreement. A hearing was
had upon the case presented from Marlborough,
and on October 5, the following decision was
rendered : —
In the matter of the joint application of Chase j Merritt & Oo,^
of Marlborough^ and the laaters in their employ,
Fbtition tiled AnousT 1, 1894. Hearing, August 7*
The application in this case calls upon the Board to
fix prices for the work of drawing over and operating
with the Consolidated Hand-Method lasting machine, also
with the Chase lasting machine. Prices have been sub-
mitted by the firm on the one side and by the workmen
on the other side, the firm asking also that separate
prices be fixed for two grades of goods, — one grade
being indicated by a selling price of $1.10 and upwards,
the other being an inferior grade, to sell from 75 cents
upwards.
Upon all the evidence presented the Board is unable
to recommend prices for a second grade, for the reason
that, although the firm expresses a desire to manufacture
goods of the inferior class in order to meet a demand in
the market, we do not in fact find that goods of that
grade are now made in this factory, and, therefore, not
sufficient data are offered upon which to fix prices.
Therefore the decision in this case is confined to the
grade of goods actually found in the factory.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 107
It should be added that it has been the custom in this
factory to pay more for lasting split and veal calf shoes on
the Consolidated Hand-Method lasting machine than for
calf, kidy dongola, kangaroo and grain shoes. So far as
the information of the Board extends, this distinction as to
stock does not prevail in other ^Lctories, but the Board has
felt compelled, in making prices, to recognize a distinction
which not only has existed heretofore in this factory, but
is recognized by the parties in the form of the lists which
they have submitted to the Board's consideration.
The Board recommends that the following prices be
paid in the factory of Chase, Merritt, & Co., in Marl-
borough : —
Chase Lasting Machine.
McKay Work.
Per pair.
Drawing over, operating and pulling lasts : —
Men's cap toe, $0.05
Men's plain toe, 04}
Boys' cap toe, .05
Boys' plain toe, Oi\
Youths' cap toe, 04]^
Youths' plain toe, 04
Children's cap toe, ....*... .04}
Children's plain toe, 04
Patent tips, extra, • 01
Goodyear Work.
Drawing over and operating : —
Men's cap toe, $0.06^
Men's plain toe, 05f
Boys' cap toe, 05|
Boys' plain toe, 05^
Youths' cap toe, 05|
Youths' plain toe, . • • 04|
Patent tips, extra, 01
108 BOARD OP ARBITRATION. [Feb,
Consolidated Hand-Method Lasting Machine.
Calf, Kid, Donoola, Kangaboo and Grain.
PeriMdr.
Drawing oyer, pounding up and pulling lasts : —
Men's cap toe, t0.08}
Men's plain toe, 03
Boys' cap toe, 03
Boys' plain toe, 02|
Youths' cap toe, 02}
Youths' plain toe, 02^
Patent tips, extra, 00}
Shellacked box, extra, 00}
Split and Veal Calf.
Drawing over, pounding up and pulling lasts : —
Men's cap toe, $0.03}
Men's plain toe, 03|
Boys' cap toe, 03}
Boys' plain toe, 02 }}
Youths' cap toe, 03
Youths' plain toe, 02}
Patent tips^ extra, 00}
Shellacked box, extra, . . .. . .. . .00}
Operating.
Men's, boys' and youths' : —
Cap toe, $0.01}
Plain toe, 01
Fflrhonr.
Cap toe and plain toe, t0.30
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple,
Clerk.
Hesiilt. The decision was accepted and acted
upon by all concerned; but the firm called the
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 109
attention of the Board to the phraseology of
the decision, saying that it ought to appear
that the employees, as well as the firm, re-
quested that prices should be found for a second
grade. The decision represents the firm as " ask-
ing also that separate prices be fixed for two
grades of goods.'' The correctness of this is not
disputed, but the firm contends that, by the act of
joining in the application, the employees also asked
that prices for two grades should be fixed by the
Board, The Board does not, jmd did not, so
understand it. The question of new prices was
originated by the firm, and they first made appli-
cation to the Board, and when the employees
joined in submitting the whole matter to the
Board, it was understood that if the Board saw fit
to establish two grades, the employees would be
bound by the decision; but at the hearing and
«
always the employees objected to second-grade
prices. Even if they had not so objected, the
Board would probably have declined to recommend
prices for a grade of goods which were not at that
time made in the factory.
110 BOARD OF ARBrrEATION. [Feb.
GEOBGE D. DAVIS — NOBTH AITOOVEB.
On July 25, one of the employees of George
D. Davis, of North Andover, called and notified
the Board that some of the workmen had been
notified of a proposed reduction of twenty per
cent, in their wages, and were contemplating a
strike, but desired to be informed of the legal
powers and duties of the State Board. He said
that a combination of manufacturers had been
formed, under the name of the American Card
Clothing Company, and, rather than submit to a
general reduction, the workmen would strike, but
before doing so would call in the State Board.
The usual information was given, with a request
that the Board might be kept advised of all that
might occur.
Subsequently a letter, dated August 6, was. re-
ceived, in which it was stated that the employees
had called on the manager, to say that they had
decided to resist any reduction, but would con-
sent to leave the matter in the hands of the State
Board, if he would agree to do the same. The
manager expressed a preference for a settlement
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. Ill
without going outside of the factory, said that he
would talk with the rest of the firm about it, that
in the mean time there would be no change in
their wages, and that they would see in their next
envelopes what the firm had decided upon. At
the next pay-day the men received full wages,
and nothing more was heard by the Board from
that quarter.
112 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
BICE & HUTCHINS — BOSTOIl^.
On August 8, the Board received a joint appli-
cation from Rice & Hutchins and the treers em-
ployed in their factory, in Boston, stating that
since the decision of the Board, rendered on Oct.
7, 1893, relating to treeing in this factory, the
employers had decided to take the shoe called
"Kip comfort tie, boot-treed," from the boot-
treed class; and that a lower price was desired
by the employers for treeing the shoe by the
ordinary process.
On August 10, after hearing the parties, the
following decision was rendered: —
In the matter of the joint application of Rice & Hutchins and
the treers employed by them in Boston,
Petition filed August 8. Hearing, August 8.
It appears that, since the giving of the decision dated
Oct. 7, 1893, in relation to treeing in the factory on
Troy Street, the superintendent has decided to change
the method of treeing the shoe called "Kip comfort tie,
boot-treed," so that it is no longer put through the pro-
cess known as boot-treeing. The question is, Wliat is a
1895-] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 113
fair price for treeing the shoe referred to by the new
method ?
Afler due consideration, the Board recommends that
the work required by the change of process be paid for
at the rate of eighteen cents per dozen pairs.
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple, Clerk.
HesuU. The decision was accepted and acted
upon by all concerned.
114 BOARD OF ARBITRATION, [Feb,
SPnOTERS AND WEAVERS' STRIKE— NEW BED-
FORD«
On August 13, notice of a proposed reduction
of wages was posted in the several cloth mills of
New Bedford. The reason assigned was poor
business and the accumulation of goods, for which
there was no demand. The employees suggested
a vacation during the hot weather, in order to
afford an opportunity to work off the surplus of
manufactured goods. They preferred this to any
reduction in the rate of wages. On the 15th, the
spinners' union had a meeting and voted to strike
on the following Monday. On the following day,
the association of card and picker room operatives
took similar action, and the weavers' union fell
into line on the 17th.
In consequence of this action of the unions, a
strike began August 20 which iavolved ten thou-
sand operatives, and brought the cloth mills of
the city, upwards of twenty in number, to a stand-
still. The Rotch Spinning Company, the New
Bedford Manufacturing Company and the How-
land Mills, all yarn mills, after a slight cessation
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 115
of operations, continued work at the old rates of
wages. "No definite statement had yet been made
as to the items of the new wage list, or the amount
of the proposed reduction in each department.
The strike was against any reduction whatever,
and the feeling among the operatives was sensibly
deepened by the evasion of the " particulars law,"
so called, which was enacted mainly at the instance
of the weavers of New Bedford.
This Board, promptly upon perceiving the situa-
tion, sent out the usual printed communications to
the manufacturers on the one side and to the
agents of the unions on the other, and waited to
see if there would be any response. None came.
The mayor invited the arbitration committee of
the manufacturers to meet representatives of the
unions, with him, in a conference to be held on
the 23d. The members of the State Board of
Arbitration and Conciliation were also invited by
him to attend. The manufacturers' committee
decided that they had no authority to act for the
associated manufacturers in a matter of that kind,
and did not attend the meeting. On the appointed
day, the State Board was in the city and attempted
to obtain interviews with some of the treasurers
of the mills, but most of them were out of town,
116 BOARD OP ARBITRATION. [Feb,
and no progress was made in that direction. The
mill owners were apparently not desirous of any
. settlement, and one said, " Let the thing take its
course."
The mayor's conference was well attended by
the representatives of the operatives; but one
manufacturer only appeared to present the views
of the mill owners. The State Board was merely
a spectator. The meeting was not productive of
any definite results.
From this time till October, the condition of
affairs remained substantially unchanged. On
October 2, the Board issued invitations to the
parties interested, requesting them to meet in the
presence of the Board, on the 4th, for a conference
with a view to a settlement of the controversy.
At the time appointed, the representatives of the
unions appeared, but a letter was received from
the managers of the mills, in which they expressed
an objection to appearing at the conference, which
they assumed would be public. Subsequently,
after an interview with the operatives, the Board
met the treasurers by appointment, and the situa-
tion was fully discussed with them. On the next
day, October 5, the Board, acting in the light of
the information obtained from both sides, ad-
dressed the following letter to all concerned: —
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 117
COMMONWBJLLTH OF Ma88ACHUBBTT8,
Statb Board of Arbitration and Conciliation,
Boston, Oct. 6, 1894.
To the Manufacturers and Operatives involved in the present contro^
versy in the doth mills of New Bedford*
The State Board of Arbitration and Conciliation, act-
ing in the discharge of its duties under the law, and
without being applied to by any party to the existing
controversy, has placed itself in communication with
both sides and made inquiry into the present condition
of affairs, sufficient to warrant the Board in saying that
the time has come for some understanding under which
the mills may resume operations, and thousands of men
and women may again be in a position to earn a living
for themselves and their families.
To this end the advice of the Board is that the opera-
tives at once assemble in such manner as may seem to
them best, and by vote propose to the agents of the
respective mills that the mills be opened to the former
operatives on Monday next, or as soon as practicable,
under a concession of one-half of the reduction hereto-
fore proposed by the manufacturers, — such vote to be
promptly communicated to the agents of the mills in
writing. And in case such action should be taken under
the advice of this Board, and in the hope of better things
in the near future when business shall improve, the
Board further recommends that the proposition be fa-
vorably considered and accepted by the corporations
interested.
118 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
These recommendations are prompted by a sincere
desire to effect a settlement for the benefit of all con-
cernedy and because the Board has reason to believe
that if the proposition shall be made as suggested, the
controversy may be happily ended, and the normal rela-
tions of employer and employees be resumed without
further loss of business, or a continuance of the present
distress.
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple, Clerk.
Three days later, at a meeting between the
treasurers and the representatives of the spinners'
union, an agreement was arrived at, on the lines
laid down by the Board. The strike was ended,
and on the 11th nearly every mill in the city was
running full.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 119
FALL BIVEB 8TBIEE — FALL RIVEB.
On August 6, the cotton manufacturers of Fall
River, acting together, decided to reduce the
wages of their operatives ten per cent, on an
average, the reduction to take effect on August 20.
The reason specially assigned was the falling off
in the demand for goods, and a consequent reduc-
tion in the market price of print cloths.
At a meeting, held on the 13th, the Amalga-
mated Association, representing all the textile
workers' unions of Fall River, voted, after much
discussion, that the reduction, although "unwise,
unjust and uncalled-for,'' should be accepted under
protest. At general meetings of the several
unions, held subsequently, similar action was
taken, except in the case of the weavers. The
weavers voted to take a four weeks' vacation, be-
ginning on the 20th. It was understood that dur-
ing the " vacation " no officer of the union should
receive his salary, that the King Philip strikers
should receive no aid in money, and that no relief
should be given except in cases of extreme need.
When the day of the proposed reduction arrived
120 BOARD OF ARBITRATIOJT. [Feb.
some of the mills were found to be running full,
but some were crippled in part and others were
wholly idle. Throughout the city about one-third
only of the looms were running. The carders,
spinners, loom-fixers and slasher-tenders went to
work as usual, according to their votes. The
weavers for the most part were absent. On the
next day ten mills were wholly shut down, and
sixteen hundred more looms were at a standstill.
The usual formal communications were sent by
the State Board to the various parties involved in
the controversy, but the rupture was too recent to
afford any chance for cool deliberation, or room
for friendly intervention. On the 22d, the execu-
tive committee of the manufacturers' association
decided that every factory in the association should
cease operations at six o'clock on the following
day. This recommendation was complied with,
and on the 24th only the Durfee Mill, the Sea-
connet, the Iron Works, the Conanicut and the
Barnaby mills were running. Every other mill in
the city was silent. Three days later the Conani-
cut Mill shut down, and only four out of forty or
more mills continued in operation.
Early in September, the Amalgamated Associa-
tion proposed a conference to the manufacturers,
but the latter declined, saying that they could not
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 121
afford to pay the increase of wages demanded, and
it was useless to discuss the situation. At the end
of the four weeks' vacation, the manufacturers still
insisting upon the reduction, a strike was declared,
and twenty thousand operatives began a new
period of idleness.
On October 5 the State Board published its ad-
vice, which led to the settlement of the contro-
versy in New Bedford, and it was hoped that the
parties involved in Fall River would adopt a sim-
ilar course to that recommended in the neigh-
boring city. The mayor took steps to bring about
a settlement, and wrote the following letter to the
manufacturers : —
C. C. RouNSEViLLE, Secretary Cotton Manufacturers^ Association,
My Dear Sir: — While not desiring to obtrude my
views in the unfortunate controversy existing between
the employers and the employees in this city, yet I may
bo permitted, at the request of many citizens, in order
to relieve the distress that is daily spreading among us
and prevent the further depletion of the public funds, to
bring to your attention a phase of the question in which
the main industry which you represent is deeply inter-
ested. Private charity has done very commendable work
to relieve the needy ; our business men, citizens and gen-
tlemen in general, notwithstanding the present crisis, are
vying with each other in doing charitable work.
122 BOARD OP ARBITRATION. [Feb.
The city authorities are doing the best they can to pre-
vent suffering. A general feeling prevails, however, that
one remedy would be the opening of the mills, so that
those inclined to go in might have work at the earliest
moment. Yielding to the wishes expressed to me and
acting upon what is coming daily to my official notice,
for what I believe to be the best interest of the city, I
make this request to your association.
The tax payers, already heavily burdened, will have
to bear a great measure of the loss which comes from
public relief. This constant drain upon our resources
can only be borne by them in the end. It is needless to
add that business is severely affected by the lack of em-
ployment of so many, I am moved to urge upon you the
necessity of speedy action upon the matter in a spirit of
conciliation and humanity. One cannot remain indiffer-
ent in the presence of a calamity which threatens our
population at the approach of winter. I avoid discussing
the merits of the controversy. I believe those imme-
diately concerned are better able to do so ; but the
matter has reached a stage where, on account of the
widespread suffering of the unemployed and the iri-e-
trievable injury to business in general, and for reasons
above stated, we are all interested in an early solution.
Believe me, dear sir.
Very respectfully yours,
J. W. COUGHLIN,
Mayor,
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No, 40. 123
To this communication the following reply was
made, on October 10: —
Whereas, it has come to our knowledge, through a
communication from His Honor and the representations
of various citizens, including the clergy, that much desti-
tution exists in our midst by reason of the closing of the
mills and the consequent inability of many of the people
to obtain employment, therefore, it is hereby agreed that
the manufacturers will open their mills Monday, October
15, for the purpose of allowing all who are so disposed to
go to work at the current rate of wages. It is further
agreed that we make this public statement to the opera-
tives of this city : —
While, under the large curtailment of production of
print cloths in Fall River and elsewhere, there has been
a substantial^ improvement in the market price, and the
visible stock has been greatly reduced, there still exists
a large invisible stock of what are known as odd makes,
with very little, if any, improvement in the demand.
We, therefore, believe that the improvement in the
print cloth market is temporary, owing to artificial
causes ; that nearly, if not quite, all mills have contracts
for future delivery sold before the present vacation began
on the then prevailing extremely low basis of prices,
while stocks of cotton were purchased at much higher
prices than now prevail.
In view of these facts, we believe the same necessity
exists for a reduction in cost that existed two weeks ago.
124 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Should our view of the conditions affecting the market
prove, happily, to be incorrect, and the margin of print
cloth is favorable sixty days from the date of starting
up, we will return to the schedule of wages paid previous
to the reduction for this period of time, giving an oppor-
tunity for working out low-priced contracts, also estab-
lishing the equilibrium of the market.
In case, however, this offer is rejected by the opera-
tives, or we fail to operate all mills subscribing hereto,
we will be governed by the provisions of our original
agreement.
The weavers at a mass meeting voted not to
accept the terms offered by the manufacturers.
The following terms were offered to the spin-
ners, and accepted by them on the 12th : Work to
be resumed, the spinners under a five per cent,
reduction, the other operatives under a reduction
of ten per cent. ; if at the end of sixty days the
margin betwieen cotton and cotton cloth should
reach 85 cents, all the employees to receive the old
wages; if it fell below 66 cents, the spinners to
lose the five per cent, and the wages of the other
employees to remain the same.
The discrimination in favor of the spinners
angered the weavers and other employees, and
they refused to accept the result of the confer-
ence. On October 15, the day set for starting
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 125
up the mills, about one-half the looms were set in
motion, and most of the mills continued to run,
although at a disadvantage for want of a sufficient
number of weavers. On October 23, the follow-
ing correspondence was had between the parties : —
Fall Riter, Mass., October 23.
Ctkds C. Rounseville, Secretary Cotton Manufacturers'* Association,
I am instructed to communicate with you, requesting a
conference with a committee representing the manufact-
urers' association, to discuss the present situation and try
to bring about a satisfactory settlement.
We have appointed a committee of five, and would be
pleased to meet a similar committee from your association
at any time and place that you can make convenient.
Hoping to receive an early and favorable reply, I
remain, Respectfully yours,
James Whitehead,
Secretary Weavers'^ Association,
Mr. James Whitehead, Secretary,
Dear Sib : — In reply to your communication of the
23d instant, I am instructed by the Cotton Manufacturers'
Association to decline the conference you propose, for the
following reasons : —
For almost a year we have endeavored to operate the
mills without reducing wages. Finding that impossible,
on account of the business depression, on August 6
notices of a reduction were posted, and on August 20,
notwithstanding the fact that all the departments recog-
126 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
nized the justice of the policy, the weavers, deciding that
they knew better than the manufacturers what would be
for the best interests of all, pi*actically took the manage-
ment of the mills into their own hands, and have dictated
for the past ten weeks what the policy should be.
We claim there is nothing in the present market condi-
tions calling for higher wages than those named in the
schedule. The fact that, after a curtailment of 1,500,000
pieces, the market should have declined one-fourth of a
cent a yard in the past two weeks, we regard as proof of
the correctness of our position.
At the earnest solicitation of the mayor and other prom-
inent citizens we were induced to open our mills under
representation that all operatives except the mule spin-
ners were ready to resume work.
Believing such to be the fact, and in order that twentj'-
five thousand operatives should have the opportunity of
earning a living, we made a small pecuniary concession
to the mule spinners, the same amounting to $350 on a
total pay roll of $150,000 per week, or less than one-
quarter of one per cent. At the same time we offered to
restore the wages of all our employees on the expiration of
sixty days, if the market conditions remained as favonible
as they were at the time the concession was made the mule
spinners.
• The mills were opened on October 15 with every de-
partment full, excepting the weaving, and over fifty per
cent, of the looms in operation. This would seem to
determine the fact that a large majority of our operatives
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 127
had been truthfully represented as desiring to go to
work.
Finding such the case, a minority of the weavers com-
menced a series of demonstrations which resulted in the
intimidation of the working weavers and the driving of
many of them from their employment.
With these facts in view, any concession is out of the
question, and believing that we have made the weavers a
fair proposition at the schedule of wages offered, they are
given an opportunity to earn as good wages as are paid
in any large manufacturing centre in New England, we
decline, as before stated, to grant your request for a con-
ference. Yours respectfully,
C. C. ROUNSEVILLE,
Secretary Cotton Manufaclurers^ AssocicUion.
Since the beginning of the trouble, no one in
Fall River had expressed any desire for the ser-
vices of the State Board, in any capacity whatever ;
but on the 26th, the Board of its own motion went
to Fall River, and met a committee of five, repre-
senting the weavers' union, who had been requested
to meet the Board. They expressed their readi-
ness to return to work on a five per cent, reduc-
tion, the same as had been offered to the spinners,
and with an assurance that the former wages
would be restored in sixty days, if in the mean-
while the margin or difference between the buying
price of cotton and the selling price of cloth
128 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
should have reached 85 cents. They also said
that if the manufacturers should insist upon a ten
per cent, reduction, but would promise the former
wages at the end of sixty days, in case the margin
should reach 77 cents, the weavers would consider
it. The substance of this interview was reported
to the manufacturers' committee, who said that
they had no authority to depart from the terms
laid down by the vote of the association, which
had decided that the ten per cent, reduction must
stand without any concession. They also declined
to meet a committee from the weavers' association.
The weavers' committee were then advised by
the Board to take no action tending to break off
negotiations, but to consider the advisability of
returning to work under the Board's advice, with
a view to referring the question of prices to some
form of arbitration, as soon as business should
have improved sufficiently to warrant a restoration
of former wages. The committee undertook to
lay the Board's suggestions before the whole body
of weavers whom they represented.
On the day next following, the Board had fur-
ther communication with the committee of the
manufacturers, with a view to obtaining, if possi-
ble, further instruction from the manufacturers'
association to its committee. A conditional ap-
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 129
pointment was made for a meeting with the Board
on the 31st. But further negotiations were
rendered unnecessary by a vote of the weavers
on October 29 to return to work on the fol-
lowing Tuesday, on the terms oflfered by the
manufacturers.
130 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
PARKHIU. MAnUFACTUBINQ COMPANY —
FITCHBUBQ.
About the middle of August, the treasurer of
the Parkhill Manufacturing Company, of Fitch-
burg, engaged in the manufacture of fine ging-
hams, gave notice to the employees that, by reason
of dulness in the trade, the mills would be shut
down on the 24th ; but a few days before the time
appointed the notice was revoked, and a reduction
of ten per cent, in the wages was proposed. The
employees, or many of them, were members of
Textile Union No. 74, but a general meeting of
all the employees was called, to consider the pro-
posed reduction. The action of the meeting was
against accepting the reduction, but it was voted
that " A committee shall be appointed to investi-
gate wages paid in Fall River, New Bedford and
Providence, where similar goods are made, and
the employees shall accept the reduction, if the
committee reports that their employer is correctly
informed of the wages paid there; but if they
report the contrary, the employer shall withdraw
his proposition to reduce." The adoption of this
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 131
vote was made known to the treasurer, but the
proposal contained in it was not agreed to by him.
On August 24, the mills were shut down, in
accordance with the notice first given.
On September 7, notices were posted that the
mills would start up on Monday, the 10th, at a re-
duction of wages varying from three per cent, to
seven per cent. The operatives met and voted not
to go to work. The three mills started up on the
day appointed, and at the same time the operatives
met outside their respective mills, and chose a com-
mittee to confer with the treasurer, renew the pro-
posal for an investigation, and ask for certain
explanations of the new wage lists. The presi-
dent and the treasurer met the committee, and
expressed regret at the state of affairs, and that
any reduction should have become necessary.
Nothing was accomplished by the interview.
Three days later, the clerk of the Board was
sent to Fitchburg to ascertain the leading facts
from the workmen, and upon hearing his report,
the Board decided to go there and attempt to
reconcile the parties. On the 19th, accordingly,
the Board called upon all the parties to the contro-
versy, at Fitchburg, and heard what they had to
say, on one side and on the other. It was the
same story, so often repeated during the past year:
132 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
the employer confronted with a lifeless market, no
orders for new goods, slow sale for the product on
hand, and a dark prospect ahead. From the em-
ployer's point of view there was certain loss ahead;
but he thought it better to run at a loss rather than
shut down the mills, — better for the business in
the end, and better for the employees, who must
earn something, in order to live. In the opinion
of the employer, in order to do this, it was neces-
sary to reduce the wages, and that course was re-
luctantly decided upon. To the workmen, on the
other hand, it seemed like cutting down their earn-
ing capacity to a point at which it was no longer
worth while to continue at work. At the inter-
view vith the president, the Board was informed
that he would agree to take back all the employees
and use them well, to run the mills fifty-eight
hours a week, and to restore the wages when busi-
ness should improve. The proposal to investigate
prices paid in other mills was declined, for reasons
which seemed good to the president.
The Board reported the substance of the inter-
view to the workmen, explained to them that, as
matters then stood, the Board could not enter
upon the investigation proposed, and advised them
to give careful consideration to the question of re-
turning to work under the offer of the company,
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 133
and thus acquire the right to call upon the State
Board to act under the law.
The proposition to return to work was not con-
sidered favorably, and the controversy drifted
along without any definite result, until in the
course of time the operatives returned to work
under the conditions established by the company.
184 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
J. F. DESMOND - MABLBOBOXJGH.
On September 8, a joint application was received
from J. F. Desmond, shoe manufacturer, of Marl-
borough, and the lasters in his employ, relating to
prices for lasting by the Consolidated Hand-method
Machine. A hearing was had on the 18th, and an
expert assistant was nominated by the employees.
The employer, not being prepared to submit a
name, said he would do so later. After waiting
until October 8, the Board requested him to nomi-
nate an expert assistant, to which request he re-
plied that by reason of the action of the lasters'
union he had ceased to operate the machine, and
had " concluded to let the matter of price drop, and
not nominate any expert."
Nothing further was done by the Board.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 135
H. A. TRXJLI.— HUDSON.
The following decision was rendered, on
November 12 : —
*
In the matter of the joint application of H, A, TruU, of Hudson^
and the laaters in his employ,
FETITtON FILED SSPT. 10, 1894. HeARIXO SEPTEMBER 12.
This case comes to the Board upon the joint application
of the employer and the lasters employed by him. The
wage list in force in the factory at the time when the
application was filed embodied a reduction from the prices
which were formerly paid in this factory by another
employer. The present employer started up the factory
under the present reduced rates, and the question having
been referred by agreement to this Board, the employees
claimed a considerable advance upon the present prices.
The employer answered, first, that in the present
depressed condition of business and in the face of an
unpromising market he .could not afford to pay any more
wages, and, second, that a fair comparison with the wage
lists of his competitors would show that the prices he was
paying were high enough.
After hearing the parties and making the usual investi-
gation of the prices and conditions in other factories
making a similar grade of goods, the Board recommends
the following list of prices to be paid in the factory of
H. A. Trull at Hudson : — '
per 24
pairs.
10.60
" 24
it
.54
" 24
u
.48
i. 24
«(
.48
u 24
cc
.54
" 24
It
.48
136 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
I
Consolidated Hand-method Machine.
Drawing over : —
Men^s cap toe split, •
Men^s plain toe split,
Boys' and youths' cap toe split,
Boys' and youths' plain toe split,
Men's cap toe buff and grain, .
Men's plain toe buff and grain.
Boys' and youths' cap toe buff and
grain, »* 24 " .42
Boys' and youths' plain toe buff and
grain, •• 24 " .42
Women's, misses' and children's, . •* 60 " .90
The foregoing prices are intended to cover all the work
of the drawer-over, as done in this factory, including
shellacked toes.
Operating : —
Men's cap toe split, .
Men's cap toe buff and grain, .
Men's plain toe split.
Men's plain toe buff and grain.
Boys' and youths' cap and plain toe
split, •• 24 " .20
Boys' and youths' cap and plain toe
buff and grain, . . . . »* 24 " .20
Women's, misses' and children's, . •* 60 •• .40
McKay-CopeLand Machine.
Drawing over and operating : —
Men's first quality cap toe, .
Men's first quality plain toe, .
Men's second quality cap toe, .
Men's second quality plain toe.
Men's opera cap toe,
Women's plain toe, .
Shellacking toes, extra, .
per 24 pairs,
to. 24
" 24 *•
.24
" 24 "
.20
•c 24 "
.20
. per 48 pairs,
♦1.76
. " 48
tt
1.20
. " 48
iC
1.47
. '• 48
l(
1.10
. " 48
It
2.00
. « 60
u
1.20
. ** pair,
»
.00}
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 137
Laying soles by machine : —
Men^s, boys^ and youths\ . • • per pair, f^'O^i
Outside taps, men^s, boy s^ and youtbs\ " " .OOJ
Women^s, misses^ and children's, . *' 60 pairs, .25
I
Laying soles by hand, women's, misses'
and children's. . . • . • *' 60 " .25
Laying soles by hand or machine, .
Lasting,
All samples, • 50 per cent extra, or,
Pnlling lasts, pegged work, men's.
Pulling lasts, pegged work, women's.
Leather tips or cap toes, women's, misses'
and children's, extra, . . . *' pair, .00}
" hour, .80
" " .80
CI
cc
.30
48 pairs, .12
60 " . 12
It will be perceived that, with some exceptioDs, the
Board has reaffirmed the present wage list ; and this con-
clusion has been reached, not because the wages now
earned are deemed by the Board to be high enough, but
because the investigation of other factories making a
similar low grade of goods failed to disclose prices which
would fairly warrant any material increase in this
factory.
By agreement of the parties, the decision is to take
effect from Sept. 10, 1894 ; and it is hoped that before
many months the outlook both for manufacturer and
workmen will be such as to give promise of larger returns
to both.
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple, Clerk.
JResulU On the very day or one day after the
decision was received in Hudson, the following
notice was received by the employer : —
138 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Mr. H. A. Tbull.
Dear Sir: — You are hereby notified that the lasters
in your employ will not be governed by the decision of
the State Board of Arbitration after sixty days from date.
Yours, .etc.,
Per order L. P. U.
• • • •
It may be presumed that the above notice was
intended to be given in accordance with the pro-
vision of law which gives either party the right to
nullify a decision by giving sixty days' notice;
but, if such was indeed the intention, it would
have been a more manly, as well as a more
business-like proceeding, if some one had signed
the paper. The most obvious result of giving the
notice was that the employer stopped taking
orders, and at the end of the year closed up his
factory in Hudson, discharged his employees, and
went away to seek a more congenial place for his
business. It is fair to say that, if the lasters had
taken a little time for consideration, they might
not have acted in such a way as was well calculated
to injure the town, and, temporarily at least,
injure other employees.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 139
n. A. TRULL— fiUDSOlr.
I I I ■ ■ ■
■ • •
Od November 28,' the following decision was
rendered : —
• •
In the matter of the joint appliccUion of H. A. TnUlj of Had-
son^ and his employees in the bottoming^ finishing and stitch^
rag departments.
Petition pilbd'Sept. 10, 1894. Hbarimob September 12, 17.
. ....
In this case the employees ask that the wages estab-
lished by the employer, in his Hudson factory, be
increased to an amount nearly or quite equal to the wages
paid before the present reduced list was posted. After a
full hearing and investigation of prices paid for similar
work, the Bpar<^ recommends that the following prices be
paid in the shoe factory of H. A. Trull, at Hudson : —
* Bottoming Room:
McKay sewing : —
Men's, •. •. . '. •. '. '. . . . fO.36
Boys* and 'youths', '. . *. ', '. . . .82
Fairstitcbing : — • . -
Men^s, boys' and youths', .84
Stand Nail, Rapid Standard, double sole tap : —
Men's, • . .28
Boys' and yout}is', . . .. , .24
Channel nailecU .. . .28
Taps: —
Slugging, • • . • .40
jsreastSi • ,.,• ,« •• »• •• •• ■ * • iv
140 BOASD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Levelling; —
Giant machine, men^s, boys^ and youths* sewed work,
inclading cementing and laying channels, • • $0.24
All surface nailed, .10
Tripp, 09
Heeling, McKay Rapid machine : —
Men^d, boys* and youths\ blind, . . . • • .26
Common, t . • • « .20
Women^s, misses* and children's, .18 I
Breasting heels : — ,
Men*s, boys* and youths*, .•..,.. .08
Shaving heels : —
Men*s, 16
Boys* and youths*, ........ .14
Women's, .15
Misses*, .15
Ghildren*s, 12
Scouring heels twice and wetting once, .14
Edge trimming, Busel machine : —
All double sole and tap, . .84
First quality fairstitch, .84
All second quality, .28
Edge setting. Truck machine : —
All split and calf, .28
Oil grain, 28
Fairstitch, 28
Bevel edge, .28
Russet, • • .28
Fairstitched russet, .....••• .28
All others, , • . .28
Wheeling edges, . .07
Burnishing heels, Rockingham machine, including blacking, .14
Finishing Boom,
Sanding : -^
Men*s, ..•••••• per day $2.25
Boys* and youths*, ...... ** 2.25
Women's, ........ '* 2.25
Misses*, ...••... " 2.25
Children's, ..•••.. *' 2.25
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 141
Miscellaneous : —
Painting bottoms, ..•••. per day 11.75
Slicking bottoms, •».... *' 1.50
Blacking shanks, ** 1.65
Padding, •• 1.65
Stamping, '' 1.65
Cleaning shanks and marking, ... '* 1.00
Treeing, •• 2.00
Brushing heels, '* 1.25
Dressing shoes, ** 1.50
Fasting : —
Balmoral and blacher facing, .08
Button boots and vamps, .... • • .08
Folded linings on balmorals, ...... .16
Creole linings and facings, • .86
Creole gores, .18
Circular seam Polish, Steams 2107, . . • . .16
Circular seam Polish and facing 2280, per 86 pairs, • . 18
Leather-lined creedmores, .16
. Button pieces,. .05
Straps, • •• .05
Congress loops, ........ .03
Rubbing and turning : —
Balmorals, congress and blucher, waxed, . . . .10
Lined creedmores, .08
Button boots, Merrick, .09
Creedmores, unlined, .06
Creoles, Merrick, .07
Waxed Creoles, .08
Merrick work, .07
Circular seam. Polish, lined, ...... .09
Circular seam Polish, unlined, .07
Women^s kip polka, .08
Vamps, . . . • .04
Shaping heel seam : —
Samples, on cylinder machine, .10
Founding : —
Beaded work, 08
Tops of trimmed lace shoes, .05
142
BOARD OF ARBITRATION.
[Feb.
Stitching : —
Union Special, lioo-nepdle :,
J>ipS| •••••■
Blucber tongu^ to liuing,
Blucher lining to T^mp, . . .
Wheeler & Wilson:
Gusset to vamp, . • . .
Cylinder:
Gusset to quarter, . ...
High-out gusset to quarter, . .
Barring, waxed thread : —
Two-needle derrick, cylinder,
One-need}e Union, 74 pattern, .
Closing heel i^eamQ, Merrick : —
Woqien's.circular s^am Polish,
Misses^ circular seam Polish, .
Children's cirqular jseam Polish,
Cre€(dniore8, ....
Men's bluchers,
Boy9' and youths' bluchers, . .
Men's baUnorals and congress.
Boys' and youths' l^lmorals and cpngress.
Closing, waxed thread, heel seam, Union : —
Men's bal morals and congress,
Boy^' an(i youths' balmorals and Qongress,
Men's Creoles,
Boys' an4 youths' Creoles,
Women's circular seam polish,
Misses* and childrep's circular seam Polish,
Woqien's, circular seam Polish, Steams, .
Women's, misses' 9fid children's polka, .
Misses' and childreip's side seams, . •
. Women's side ^eams,
Creedmores,
Whole vamps, ....
Gussets, ....
Countering, waxed thread. Union : —
Woipen's pol^, , •
Misses' apd childreti's pplka.
. *
• •
* •
• • t .
fO.lO
.12
.12
16
.28
.84
.36
.45
.14
.13
.12
.12
.16
.15
.16
.15
.16
.14
.15
.18
.18
.12
.14
.18
.22
.24
.12
.08
.06
.18
.12
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 143
Misses^ and children's circular seam Polish, . . . $0.12
Women's circular seam Polish, .13
Men's creedmores and Creoles, .14
Goring, Waxed thread, Merrick and Union : —
Women's^ ' . . . .14
Misses', . . . . . .13
Children's, 12
Plough shoes, .13
Farmers' Alliance, . . .25
Staying, Merrick, two-needle : —
Waxed thread :
Balmorals, congress and creedmores, . . . . .15
t^reoJes, . . • . . •!••. . .lo
Hough shoes, .15
Unlined balmorals, .15
Polka, 18
Circular seam Polish, .18
Sid&seam, . • • > • . . . . * • .24
Dry thread I
Balmorals and creedmores, flat, .20
Button pieces, inside, .17
High-cut creedmores, .22
One-needle :
Men's bluchers, balmorals and congress, . . . .22
Boys' and youths', .20
Spread eyeleting : —
Men's, boys' and youths', ..,.«.. .12
Eyeleting : —
Polka and Polish, ........ .07
Lined closed polkas, .11
Men's, 10
Boys' 09
Youths', 09
Men's first and second quality, . . . . .10
Boys' and youths', ........ .09
Men's third and fourth quality, . ... .10
Boys' third and fourth quality, .09
Touguing, waxed thread, Union : —
Women's polka, .12
144 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Misses^ and children's, • fO.lO
Women's Polish, .10
Misses' and children's Polish, .10
Men's plough shoes, .13
Boys' and youths', .12
Gusset plough, • .18
Lapping, Post : —
Two rows:
Women's polka, .15
Misses' polka, .14
Children's polka, .14
Women's Polish, .15
Misses' Polish, . .14
Children's Polish 13
Three rows :
Ploughs, creedraores and Creoles, .20
Stitching, congress gores, plain edge, Wheeler & Wilson : —
Men's, boys' and youths', held on, • • . • • .72
Turned lining, tops all made, .90
First row on trimmed edges, Wheeler & Wilson : —
Men's round-top balmoi-als and button boots, held on, . .26
Boys' round-top balmorals and button boots, held on, . .24
Youths' round-top balmorals and button boots, held on, .22
Men's folded linings pasted, ■ .24
Boys' folded linings pasted, .22
Youths' folded linings pasted, .20
Men's creedmores, flat before closing, . . . . .24
Boys', flat before closing, .22
Youths', flat before closing, .20
Men's creedmores closed, leather lined, . . . . .24
Boys' creedmores closed, leather lined, . . . . .24
Youths' creedmores closed, leather lined, . . • .22
Men's balmorals, trimmed lace, front only, . . . .16
Boys' and youths' trimmed lace, .14
Men's turned and trimmed lace, .28
Boys' and youths' turned and trimmed lace, • . . .28
Boys' button boot turned and trimmed button piece, . .80
Men's corded balmoral top, .22
Boys' and youths' corded balmoral top, . • . . .20
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 145
Women^s circular seam Polish closed, • . . . (0.30
Misses^ circular seam Polish closed, . . . .30
Children's circular seam Polish closed, . . . . .28
Women's circular seam Polish pasted, . . . . .28
Misses' circular seam Polish pasted, . . . . .26
Children's circular seam Polish pasted, . . . . .24
Stamping : —
Congress, .......... .04
Balmoral button and creedmore, .04
Blucher, 04
Creole, 02
Don Pedro, 06
Polish linings, .03
Polish gores, .04
Lined creedmores with toe piece, .04
Unlined Polish 04
Second row, with tongue : —
Spread eyelets, .22
Straight eyelets, .20
Sham row on quarter with tongue out, . . . . .08
Blucher, 16
Boys' and youths' square top bal morals with tongue, • .18
Vamping, dry thread, cylinder, one-needle : —
Men's creedmores, three rows, one-needle, . . • 1.16
Boys' creedmores, 1.12
Youths' creedmores, 1 . 10
Youths' creedmore blucher, .84
Men's blucher, .90
Boys' blucher, 86
Men's balmorals, three rows, 1.16
Boys' balmorals, three rows, 1.12
Youths' balmorals, three rows, 1.10
Men's balmorals, two rows, one-needle, . . . . .96
Boys' balmorals, two rows, .92
Youths' balmorals, two rows, .90
Vamping, two rows : —
Congress and balmorals. Union Special machine, two-
needle, .40
Congress and balmorals, Singer machine, two-needle, . .44
Button boots, Union Special machine, two-needle, . • .40
146
BOARD OP ARBITRATION.
[Feb.
Button boots. Singer machine, two-needle,
Boys^ and youth9\ Union Special machine, two-needle, .
. Boys* and youths\ Singer machine, two-needle, • •
Vamping, dry thread, Singer, one-needle : —
Flat yamp, one-needle,
Stitching points,
Third row, one-needle, congi'ess and balmorals,
Vamping, dry thread, balmorals, congress and button
boots : —
Men '3, Merrick, three rows, three-needle,
Boys\ Merrick, three rows, ....
Youtjis', Merrick, three rows,
Two and three rows, fine Merrick glove grain,
Two.rows, Merrick, two-needle, . •
Two rows, circular seam Polish, women^s.
Three rows, circular seam Poljsh, women^s, three-needle,
Three rows, circular seam Polish, mi8ses\ three-needle.
Three rows, children^
Men^s, boys* and youths*, cylinder-fitted, •
Two-needle, dry thread, Wheeler & Wilson : —
Two.rows on creed mores, two-needle, .
Unliped goring Creoles with facings,
Unlined Creoles, gore and strap, no facing.
Lined Creoles with strap,
Linings pasted in with facing, ....
Carrick gore, per 86 pairs, ...
Beaded tgp. Singer, one-needle : —
Men*s square-top balmorals, trimmed, front, .
Boys* square-top balmorals, trimmed, front, .
Youths* square-top balmorals, trimmed, front,
Men*^ high-cut balmorals and strap.
Boys* high-cut balmorals and strap,
Touths* high-cut baJmorals and strap,
Men*9 button quarters, . .
Boys* button qpaiters, . .
Youths* button quarters, .
Men*s button pieces.
Boys*, button pieces,. .
Youths* button pieces,
Men> bluphers.
10.44
.86
.40
.54
.40
.20
.40
.86
.82
.82
.86
.25
.82
.80
.28
.56
.18
.56
.48
.65
.50
.18
.40
.88
.86
.50
.48
.46
.86
.84
.82
.18
.17
.16
.42
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 147
Boj8' blachers, |0.40
Youths* bluchers, .38
Creedmores, beaded all rouDd« .44
Cording creedmores, .32
Cording creedmores, down lace, .40
Circular seam Polish, 170-28Q cut, 70
Cording tops of balpiorals, . . • . • • • .20
Cording tops of balmorals closed, .80
Skiving : —
Skiving (day work), per day, 1.50
Stitching linings, Wilcox & Gibbs, one-needle : —
Balmorals, top and side facings, .12
Congress, front lacings, .' .08
Tops, 08
Imitation turned, balmorals, .14
Closing creedmores, .06
Closing circular heel seam, .07
Mortimer cut, .26
Creoles, .OiS
Closing and staying creedmores, .20
Closing and staying balmorals, .24
Closing on balmorals, .12
Closing on tops, bluchers, .12
Cylinder-fitted with loop, .14
Cylinder-fitted without loop, .10
Trimming with scissors : —
Bluchers, .10
Congress gore, .08
Creoles, .10
Creoles lined, .12
Cloth-lined creedmores, .06
Leather-lined creedmores, .08
Balmorals, heel seams, •- .08
Miscellaneous : —
Perforating tips, 01^
Stringing, per 12 pairs, 01
Packing, per 12 pairs, 00|
Braces on vamp, 03
Turned top of congress lining, 04
Roll imitation turned lining, . -. . . • • .03
148 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
Pinking:^ —
Facings, $0.08
Tips, 02
Vamps, . 05
RivetiDg : —
Plough shoes, two buckles, 20
Rivet and buckle preedmores, . . . . . . .10
Rivet creedmores, per 12 pairs, 01
In fixing wages to be paid by the day, the Board, in
each instance, has had in mind a competent person of aver-
age skill and ability employed to do work of the Hudson
grade. But since it is well known that workmen exhibit
various degrees of skill and speed, it is not intended by this
Board to draw a rigid line and require the manufacturer
to pay one uniform rate to all, whatever their skill and
ability may be. It is expected, rather, that special cases
will be dealt with in such a manner that the operatives
may receive a fair return for theii* labor, and the employer
may not suffer in particular instances by being required
to pay an inferior workman the wages of a first class man.
Except when otherwise specified, the piece prices are
intended to apply to 48 pairs of men's, boys' and youths',
and 60 pairs of women's, misses' and children's shoes,
respectively.
• In accordance with the agreement of the parties, this
decision is to take effect from Sept. 10, 1894, the date of
the application.
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple, Clerk.
Result. The decision was accepted and acted
upon by all concerned.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 40. 149
G. B. BBIGHAM ft SONS— WESTBOBOUGH.
On November 12, the following decision was
rendered : —
In the matter of the joint application of G, B. Brigham Jb Sons^
of Westboroughy and their employees.
Petition pilbd September 18. Heakino September 18.
The firm in this case has introduced the Stoddard
crimping machine, but, no price having been established
in the factory, the Board is requested by all concerned
to fix a fair price for crimping seamless Creole shoes.
Having given the matter due consideration, the Board
recommends that in this factory the firm pay the sum of
six cents per dozen ; but when shoes are put through the
machine again, after being in the drying room, the Board
recommends that eight cents per dozen be paid.
It is agreed by the parties that this decision shall take
efiect from May 1, 1894,
By the Board,
Bernard F. Supple,
Clerk.
Sesult. The decision was accepted and acted
upon by all concerned.
150 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
TUSTLTED STATES WHIP OOKPANY — WESTFIELD.
The Board received a communiQation, on Octo-
ber 25, that the United States Whip Company, a
corporation extensively engaged in the manu-
facture of whips, etc., had prepared a new schedule
of prices, that the effect was a reduction of ten per
cent, and upwards, and there was apprehension of
a general strike in Westfield. The Board at once
gave notice that it would visit that town on the
30th, and on the appointed day had interviews
with the workmen and with the general manager
and executive committee of the corporation, who
had a meeting that day.
The manager stated that the reduction was un-
avoidable, by reason of the falling off in trade, due
in part to the general depression in the business
world and partly to the increasing use of bicycles.
It was stated that, taking the entire pay roll into
consideration, the reduction would not exceed five
per cent., but it appeared that a good many of the
employees did not suffer any reduction, while, of
those whose wages were reduced, the percentage
was in some instances as high as twenty-five. In
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 151
reply to the Board's inquiries, the manager said
that, if the Board so recommended, he would, with
the executive committee, reconsider such items as
might be brought to their attention by the em-
ployees as being disproportionately severe, and
would do what they could to correct any irregu-
larity that might appear. This was reported to the
agent of the employees, who was requested to
state to the meeting to be held that evening that
the Board advised against any strike, but that a
committee should present to the manager any items
which appeared to them to cut too deep, and await
the decision of the corporation ; that later on, when
business and the season should be more propitious,
if the employees in their judgment thought best to
apply in the regular way, the Board would, as
required by law, take up the matter, make an
investigation and report accordingly.
The Board has received recent information to
the effect that the general manager and executive
committee, acting in compliance with the Board's
request, examined again carefully the schedule of
wages, but that no further complaints from the
employees were presented to them.
152 BOARD OF ARBITRATION. [Feb.
DONOHTJE & WHITE — LYNN.
On November 3, the greater part of the men
employed by Oonohue & White, morocco manu-
facturers of Lynn, went on strike to enforce a
demand for a restoration of the rate of wages
paid before July, 1893, when a reduction was
made of $1 per week. The firm said that they
were paying as much as any one else, and could
not afford to pay any more, and offered to show
their books to the employees.
The Board communicated informally with the
parties, and then gave notice to both parties that
they would go to Lynn on the 14th, for the pur-
pose of attempting a settlement. On the next
day, however, a letter was received from the firm,
in reply to the Board's communication, stating that
the controversy had been settled satisfactorily to
both sides, and that most of the men had returned
to work.
1895.] PUBLIC DOCUMENT— No. 40. 153
The foregoing annual report is respectfully
submitted.
CHARLES H. WALCOTT,
RICHARD P. BARRY,
RICHARD E. WARNER,
SUUe Board of Arbitralion and Conciliation,
BosTOK, Feb. 25, 1895.
tl.
EEPOET
or THS
MASSACHUSETTS BOAED
or
WoRLFs Fair Managebs.
BOSTON :
WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO., STATE PRINTERS.
18 Post Office Square.
1894.
» «
Boston, Sept. 26, 1894.
His Excellencj Goyemor Fbedesic T. Gbeenhalgb and the Hon-
orable Executive Council.
SiBfi : — The Massachusetts Board of World's Fair Managers,
having completed their labors, beg leave to submit to you for
your consideration the following report, showing the methods
adopted by them in the prosecution of their work, the amounts
of money, in more or less of detail, expended out of the appro-
priations made by the several Legislatures ; reports made to
them by those having charge of the several State exhibits;
and papers prepared by different writers on various exhibits
from the Commonwealth.
BespectfuUy submitted,
Massachusetts Board of World's Fair Managers,
FRANCIS A. WALKER, Chairman.
ALICE FREEMAN PALMER.
ANNA L. DAWES.
EDWARD BURNETT.
E. C. HOVEY, Secretary.
REPORT,
ORGANIZATION AND WORK OF PREPARATION FOR
EXHIBITS.
The General Court of Massachusetts in the year 1891
adopted the following Resolve, which, on May 28 of that
year, received the approval of His Excellency the Gov-
ernor : —
Resolved^ That for the purpose of exhibiting the resources,
products and general development of the Commonwealth at the
World's Columbian Exposition of the year 1893, a Board of
World's Fair Managers of Massachusetts, consisting of five
residents of the Commonwealth, of whom three shall be men
and two women, shall be appointed by the Governor by and
with the consent of the Council. The said Board shall have
charge of the interests of the Commonwealth and its citizens
in the preparation and exhibition at the World's Columbian
Exposition of the year 1893, of the natural and industrial
products of the Commonwealth and of objects illustrating its
history, progress, moral and material welfare and future de-
velopment, and in all other matters relating to the said
World's Columbian Exposition; it shall communicate with
the officers of, and obtain and disseminate through the Com-
monwealth all necessary information regarding said Exposi-
b BEPORT OF BOABD OF
tion and in general have and exercise full authority in relation
to the participation of the Commonwealth and its citizens in
the World's Columbian Exposition of the year 1893. To carry
out the provisions of this resolve, a sum not exceeding seventy-
five thousand dollars may be expended under the direction of
the Governor and Council, provided that of such sum not less
than ten thousand dollars shall be devoted to the educational
exhibit of the Commonwealth.
Under the provisions of the foregoing resolve,
Excellency the Governor appointed and the Council con-
firmed the following members of the Board of World's
Fair Managers: Gen. John W. Corcoran of Clinton,
Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer of Cambridge, Miss Anna
L. Dawes of Pitt^field, Hon. Edward Burnett of South-
borough and E. C. Hovey of Brookline.
The General Court of Massachusetts in the succeeding
year, namely, during the year 1892, adopted the fol-
lowing resolve : —
Resolved^ That for the purpose of exhibiting the arts, in-
dustries, institutions, resources, products and general develop-
ment of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts at the World's
Columbian Exposition at Chicago, in the State of Illinois, in
the year 1893, there be allowed and paid out of the treasuiy
of the Commonwealth a sum not exceeding seventy-five thou-
sand dollars ($75,000.00), to be expended under the direc-
tion of the Governor and Council to carry out the provisions
of this resolve ; the sum to be in addition to the seventy-five
thousand dollars ($75,000.00) authorized by chapter 98 of
the Resolves for the year 1891.
Besoloedy That the Massachusetts Building and, as far as
WORLD'S FAm MANAGERS. 7
the same is under the control of the Board of Managers, the
Massachusetts exhibit be closed on the first or Lord's Day.
This resolve received the Executive approval on May
6, 1892.
On the twenty-fiflh day of March, 1893, His Excel-
lency the Governor gave his approval to the following
resolve passed by the General Court of the year 1893 : —
Besolved^ That for the purposes of exhibiting the arts, in-
dustries, institutions, resources, products and general develop-
ment of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts at the World's
Columbian Exposition at Chicago, in the State of Illinois, in
the year 1893, there be allowed and paid out of the treasury
of the Commonwealth a sum not exceeding twenty-five thou-
sand dollars ($25,000.00) , to be expended under the direction
of the Governor and Council to carry out the provisions of
this resolve ; the sum to be in addition to the amounts hereto-
fore authorized.
The members of the Board, having received their
commissions under date of July 16, 1891, held their
first meeting on July 30 of that year in the Sears
Building, Boston, and organized with the choice of
John W. Corcoran as Chairman and E. C. Hovey as
Secretary.
The Chairman and Secretary having been appointed
a conmiittee, with full powers, to provide permanent
quarters for the Commission, executed a lease, expir-
ing Jan. 1, 1894, for offices in Sears Building, Boston,
at an annual rental of twelve hundred dollars.
8 BBPOBT OF BOARD OP
Shortly after the organization of the Board, the
Chairman and Secretary visited Chicago for the par-
pose of becoming acquainted with the Exposition offi-
cials, as well as to learn the many details incident
to the work which had been given them to do. From
that time until the 1st of December, 1893, members
of the Boaid were in Chicago a part of every month ;
and it is believed that it is largely through the hearty
co-operation of the Exposition officials which naturally
followed these continued visits that the results have
been obtained of which mention is made in this report.
Desiring that the Commonwealth should hold a posi-
tion equally as important in the World's Columbian
Exposition of Chicago as she did in the Centennial of
1876, in Philadelphia, the Board at once took steps
to awaken an interest throughout the Commonwealth
among the people of the State. This was accomplished
by addresses made before boards of trade, by attend-
ance upon meetings of commercial clubs, by the issu-
ing of circulars and by an extensive correspondence.
At the time of their appointment the members of
the Board found a decided want of interest in the Ex-
position, and it was not until some time thereafter
that they obtained very much encouragement from the
citizens of the State.
The agencies above referred to, together with the
press, to which the Board are very glad at this time to
extend their cordial acknowledgment for assistance ren-
WORLD'S FAIR HAKAaEBS. 9
dered, finally awakened an interest, the demands for
space in the Exposition becoming so threateningly
large as to bring about a condition of aflQurs which
make it possible to say that the space asked for was
sufficient to hare filled an exposition even three times
the size of that contemplated.
It was at this time that two members of the Board
were in Chicago and learned that the space originally
intended for the Department of Education had been so
curtailed by reason of the fact that the commercial
exhibits were being continually cared for to the detri-
ment of exhibits in the Department of Liberal Arts.
They protested in the name of the Commonwealth
against the further robbery of the space needed by the
educational interests of the country. Bequesting a hear-
ing before the Executive Committee of the World's
Columbian Exposition, they appeared before that body
in person and filed numerous protests in the shape of
telegrams and letters, not only from citizens of the
Commonwealtii, but from those of sixteen States of the
Union. The space, however, had been so fully as-
signed in the buildings then erected that there was
but one way by which education could receive its proper
recognition, this being through the erection of a new
building. After some weeks' delay the petition of the
Massachusetts Board of World's Fair Managers, en-
dorsed as it was not only by those to whom reference
has already been made but by people from all over
12 BEFOBT OF BOABD OF
STATE BUILDING.
Soon after the organization of the Board it became
necessaiy to consider whether the Commonwealth shoold
occupy the ground which had been allotted to it on the
Exposition grounds for the erection of a State building.
The Board, having secured one of the four most de-
sirable sites on the main avenue on which were to be
erected the State buildings, decided that the Common-
wealth should be thus represented ; and, to that end,
asked several architects to submit plans, suggesting that
the building should be in the spirit, if not an exact
copy, of some one of the many well-known historical
buildings within the State.
At a meeting held at the office of the Board on Sept.
4, 1891, five separate designs and floor plans were
submitted for their consideration. It was finally de-
cided unanimously to select the design submitted by
Messrs. Peabody & Steams of Boston.
In order to bring the matter to the attention of the
Governor and Council, the Board of World's Fair Man-
agers obtained from a contractor an estimate (not a
bid) of the cost of putting up this building.
At a meeting with the Governor and Council on
Oct. 7, 1891, the Board submitted the design selected
by them, together with plans, and asked that they be
authorized to spend a sum not exceeding $35,000 ^* for
the ^purpose of constructing and furnishing a State
building at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago."
• ^
WOBLD'S FAIB MANAGEBS. 13
This request was granted, and the sum indicated was
afterwards increased, by vote of the Governor and
Council, under date of March 5, 1892, to $50,000, said
sum to cover the entire cost not only of constructing
but also of furnishing said building.
On the twenty-first day of March, at a stated meeting
of the Board, all bids which had been received, in an-
swer to a printed advertisement in several of the Boston
papers, were opened and the contract for erecting the
building under the specifications submitted at the time
was let to Mr. C. Everett Clark, a Boston contractor,
for the sum of $39,494.
It must be said in this connection that certain items
of necessary expense were withheld from the specifica-
tions by reason of the fact that the Board had reason
to expect that certain articles which naturally would
have been included would be donated to the State.
Other items, such, for instance, as grading and sodding
the grounds around the State Building, and architects'
commissions, did not properly come within the specifi-
cations by the contractor.
The total cost of the State Building, with these items
added to the bid, as made by and accepted from the con-
tractor, amounted to $46,550.41.
A list of those who assisted in the construction and
furnishing of the Massachusetts State Building, free of
expense to the State, appears in Appendix A.
When it became necessary to consider the question
14 REPORT OF BOARD OF
of famishing the Massachusetts State Bailding, the Board
of World's Fair Managers decided to obtain, if possible,
from manufiGicturers of furniture within the State, as well
as frt)m dealers in furnishings, such articles as would
be needed to make its interior attractive and comfort-
able and at the same time as truly colonial and historical
as its members believed its exterior to be. To that end
they negotiated with parties throughout the State, tiie
result being that, with the exception of one or two
pieces of furniture which it became necessary to buy
after the managers had taken possession of the build-
ing, there was not a piece of furniture in the house
for which the State paid. This statement covers elec-
tric chandeliers, tiles, mantelpieces, part of the plumb-
ing, carpets, window screens, stained glass windows, —
indeed, almost everything which was within the build-
ing.
Most of the furniture was made especially for the
building, after designs of old furniture which was used
in pre-Bevolutionary times, though in one room there
was not a piece of furniture which was less than a
hundred years old.
There were on the walls of the Massachusetts State
Building a collection of pictures, not one of which had
not some association with the history of the Common-
wealth. Most of these, as also relics and historical
collections, were kindly loaned by citizens of the State,
a list of whom appears in Appendix B.
WOKLD*S FAIR MANAGERS. 15
The Board, wishing to give to the building an his-
torical interest, opened a correspondence with the sev-
eral historical societies within the Commonwealth, with
the hope that they might be induced to loan some of
their rare and interesting relics. The success which
these efforts met with is well known to the citizens of
the State who visited the building.
It was, however, a matter of very great regret to the
members of the Board that such well-known bodies as
the EBstorical Society of Boston, the Bostonian Society,
the Pilgrim Society of Plymouth and the Deerfield His-
torical Association found themselves unable, by reason of
the £Eict that many of the articles were in their posses-
sion only for safe keeping, to send to the Massachu-
setts State Building some contributions to the historic
interest which the building awakened.
Within its walls were brought together historical relics
to the value of over $20,000.
The Board wish at this time to publicly extend the
thanks of their members to the Essex Institute of Salem,
to the committee of ladies of Boston, to the Cape Cod
Association and to the many individual contributors by
whose efforts the house was made so interesting.
No citizen of the Commonwealth could pass through
that building without finding many historical articles
to call forth his interest and curiosity; and it is with
great satisfaction that the Board are able to report that
the generosity and public spirit shown by these citi-
16 BEPOBT OF BOARD OF
zens of the Commonwealth were fiillj appreciated by the
citizens of the State.
It is also with great satisfiEkction that the Board are able
to report to His Excellency the Governor and the hon-
orable Executive Council that not a single one of these
articles, cherished as they naturally are by their owners,
has been lost or broken, or has failed to be returned.
It seems fitting that the contents of the building
should be entered into in more or less of detail, for it
is undoubtedly true that they gave much interest to the
visitors who realized their historic importance and who
appreciated the opportunity of seeing on the walls the
&Lce& of so many of the men and women who have helped
to make the Commonwealth what she has always been
and what she is to-day.
It is not necessary, perhaps, to give an inventory of
these articles; but the Board feel that they would £EiIl
short of their duty if they did not recur to a number of
them which were of especial interest to the sons and
daughters of the Commonwealth, and thus retain in per-
manent form a description not only of the building bat
of its contents as well.
Desiring that those who visited the building might be
made familiar not only with the &eea but ofttimes with
the handwriting of the men and women of Massachu-
setts whose reputation and good work in different walks
of life are, in many cases, international, the Board made
a careful selection of those to be included in this roll of
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 17
honor^ confining themselves, with but few exceptions,
to those who were not living. By borrowing, or in
some few cases by purchase, they obtained the pictures
which for six months helped to tell the story of the
progress and development of the Commonwealth.
As representatives of reformers there were placed on
the walls of the Massachusetts State Building pictures
of Wendell Phillips, William Lloyd Garrison, Charles
Sumner, Robert C. Winthrop, John Hancock, Eobert
Treat Paine, the three Adamses find Theodore Parker.
Representing the church were such worthy faces as
those of William E. Channing, Jonathan Edwards,
Bishop Brooks, James Freeman Clark, Bishop Haven,
Professor Hedge, Bishop Hackett and Hosea Ballon.
Statesmanship furnished portraits of Daniel Webster,
John A. Andrew, George Cabot, Edward Everett and
Timothy Pickering.
From the long list of historians of which the Com-
monwealth may be justly proud, there were selected por-
traits of John Lothrop Motley, Geoi^e Bancroft, Francis
Parkman, George Ticknor and William H. Prescott.
In the field of letters were seen such well-known
&ces as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes,
Henry W. Longfellow, John Greenleaf Whittier, Na-
thaniel Hawthorne, Richard H. Dana, W. D. Howells,
Thomas Bailey Aldrich, John Boyle O'Reilly, James
Russell Lowell, Thomas W. Parsons, William Culien
Bryant, Thomas Went worth Higginson, Helen Hunt
18 REPORT OP BOARD OP
Jackson, Celia Thaxter, Louise May Alcott and Lacy
Larcom.
The bench and bar were well represented by portraits of
Lemuel Shaw, Theophilus Parsons, Bufiis Choate, Judge
Devens, Nathan Dane, Joseph Story and Samuel Sewall.
Among the scientists were seen the faces of Nathaniel
Bowditch, the two Bigelows, Benjamin Pierce, Benjamin
Franklin and Professor Agassiz.
As representatives of philanthropy and benevolence
were seen the faces of Maria Weston Chapman, Lydia
Maria Child, Dorothea Dix and George Peabody.
The martial element was fitly shown in the f&ces of
General Hooker, General Lowell, General Bartlett, Gen-
eral Sumner and Colonel Shaw.
The early Colonial and pre-Eevolutionary days had
fitting representatives in the &ces of Governor Endicott,
Governor Bradstreet, William Pynchon, Governor Win-
throp and Governor Winslow.
Commerce furnished the faces of such men as Joseph
Peabody, John Bertram, William Gray, Jr., Elias
Haskett Derby and Benjamin Pickering.
Such, then, is the list, in part at least, of the fsicea
which were placed before the visitors to the Massachu-
setts State Building, — faces which served to remind
the sons and daughters of the Commonwealth of the
part which Massachusetts has played in the several
fields of which these portraits were representatives.
Among the many articles of especial interest within
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 19
the building there were perhaps no two which awakened
a livelier interest than the manuscript speech of Charles
Sumner, delivered in the Senate Chamber in Washington
in 1856, which speech was followed a few days after by
the blow from Brooks; and the original watch, fully
authenticated, brought by Miles Standish when he came
to this country in the ''Mayflower." It may, however,
be admitted that an equal interest was awakened by the
sight of the Adams cradle, in which the members of five
generations, including two Presidents of the United
States, had been rocked in their infancy.
One room within the State Building, which was given
over to the Essex Institute of Salem, within which
they might place a collection of portraits and of his-
toric relics, was interesting and instructive almost
beyond description. It was to this that reference was
made in the statement that one room within the
building contained no piece of furniture less than a
hundred years old. Here might be seen interesting
examples of the old court cupboard, oak chest and
reading chairs of the Colonial period, secretaries and
sideboards and settles of the Revolutionary and pre-
Eevolutionary times, chairs and tables representing the
witchcraft period, and two hall clocks, — one in a black
oak case with works made in Halifax, England; the
other in a solid mahogany case, which must have been
made in Lexington before the battle which has made
the name of that town historical.
20 KBPORT OF BOARD OF
On the walls of this room were pictures — some pho-
tographs, some engravings and some in water colors —
showing well-known houses in Salem and representa-
tive of the various styles of architecture in use in
Colonial and pre-Bevolutionary times; such, for in-
stance, as the Narbonne house, still standing, though
built in 1680, **a good illustration of the architecture
of that period, showing the lean-to roof;" the Ward
house, built in 1684, and not yet destroyed, which
** shows the overhanging second stoi^ which romance
attributes to being used as a protection against the
Indians;" the Cabot house, built about 1748, "a fine
illustration of the Colonial type, showing a good ex-
ample of the gambrel roof; " the Roger Williams
house, ** familiarly called ' Old Witch House,* owned
in 1635 and 1636 by Roger Williams, and occupied in
1692 by Jonathan Curwen, one of the judges in the
witchcraft trials;" and the Emerson house, ** built in
1817 and remodelled in 1876, a good example of Colo-
nial spirit in modem architecture."
On the sideboards and mantels and within the several
cupboards were to be seen examples of old china, some
decorated and some plain, some of American manu*
facture and some which had been imported, dating
back in some instances to a period as early as 1675.
Here was to be seen a silver cream jug, the " marriage
pitcher" of Susannah Ingersoll and Daniel Bray, 1680,
descended through the family of Philip English to
MASSACHUSETTS STATE BUILDING, — Staircase.
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 21
Susannah Ingersoll, occupant, in B[awthome's time, of
the so-called "House of Seven. Gables ; " and candela-
bra and brass candlesticks without number.
Within the ten cases provided by the Essex Institute
in which to displa}*^ the collection of historic relics,
were to be seen articles of a great variety of descrip-
tion, and all of the highest interest. In one there were
collected together **the coins and paper currency of
Massachusetts Bay in New England during the Colonial
and Eevolutionary periods, covering issues from 1650
to 1788." These were all in fine condition, and in-
cluded a New England shilling, minted in Boston in
1650, "pine tree" and "oak tree" shillings, "pine
tree" sixpences, "pine tree" threepences, "oak tree"
twopennies, all of the issue of 1562, and "Indian"
cents and half cents; and paper currency, beginning
with a bill of five shillings issued in 1690, and coming
down to the Continental currency of Massachusetts Bay
issued in 1780.
In the second case, which was given over to exam-
ples of early New England presswork, were placed
almanacs of the eighteenth century; an original en-
graving by Paul Revere in its original frame; a pam-
phlet containing abstracts of Massachusetts Criminal
Law printed in 1704, containing the famous " Scarlet
Letter " law ; another relating to the Maule contro-
versy ; Salem and Boston newspapers of the eighteenth
century, " including one in mourning announcing the
22 BEPOBT OF BOARD OP
death of George Washington ; " and, what was of sin-
gular interest to all those whose attention was called to
them, four lottery tickets, one issaed by the United States
Govemment in 1776 to recoup war expenses, a second
issued by the State of Massachusetts in 1771 to procure
fiinds, a third which was placed upon the market by
Harvard College in 1795 for educational purposes, and
finally, one which in 1802 was put forth by a church in
Bristol, R. I., evidently in need of Ainds to support
the ministry and pay the expenses incident to worship.
In still another case were to be seen examples of
old-time needlework. Among these was a ^^ sampler
wrought previous to 1628 by Anne Gower, the first
wife of Governor John Endicott.**
Among the early theological and witchcraft manu-
scripts to be seen in the next case were sermons
preached by several of the ministers of Salem, includ-
ing the Rev. Mr. Pickman in 1644, and one preached
by the Rev. George Curwin in 1716, evidently as a
thanksgiving offering for the success of George the
First over the Pretender. Here also was the deposi-
tion of Mrs. Anne Putnam and Anne Putnam, Jr.,
under date of May 31, 1692, against Rebekah Nurse
and others who were hanged for witchcraft in 1692 ;
the indictment of Abigail Hobbs for ^* covenanting
with the Devil;" and a deed of land signed by
Bridget Bishop in 1699, the said Bridget Bishop being
the first victim of the witchcraft craze.
WORLD'S FAIR MAKAGBBS. 23
In another case were to be seen manuscripts of a
commercial nature , including an account book dated
1678 and 1690; bills of lading of the eighteenth cen-
tury; bill of exchange and policy of insurance, — all
of a time prior to the opening of the present century ;
while in still another case were official manuscripts,
including an autograph letter of Benjamin Goodhue,
the first member of Congress from the Essex District;
** Resolution of the Continental Congress at Philadel-
phia, directing George Washington to raise troops in
New Hampshire, signed by General Hancock, Presi-
dent, and Charles Thompson, Secretary ; " a state
paper signed by James Monroe, Secretary of State,
under date of Aug. 28, 1812; and a botanical note
book of Manassah Cutler, who ^' made the first scien-
tific description of the plants of New England,** and
who also ^' started the first party of emigrants to
Ohio.**
In the other cases were placed a collection of
medals, bronze and copper; gold-mounted seals; ex-
amples of the old "tinder boxes, with flint, steel and
tinder;** steelyards used in 1738; ** pitch pipe used
for setting the tune in church choirs and in singing
schools ; ** and a small iron shovel formerly belonging
to and used no doubt by Benjamin Franklin to light
his pipe; tobacco and snuff boxes; shoe buckles and
knee buckles; pocketbooks and lai^e tortoise-shell
combs ; and, as an interesting article, a pair of pattens,
24 BBFOBT 07 BOARD OF
" the forenmner of rubber shoes,** and a pair of old
Par& gum shoes, the first lined rubber shoes used.
It should not be forgotten to call attention to a case
on the wall containing a number of examples of the
old silhouettes which were so common in the early
days of the present century, as well as prior thereto.
The foregoing are but the cullings - from this very
interesting museum of historical relics, collected
through the industry of the citizens of Salem, and,
through their liberality, courtesy and public spirit,
placed within the keeping of the Massachusetts Board
of World's Fair Managers, as the contribution of Essex
County to the State Building at the World's Colum-
bian Exposition.
The Board take pleasure, too, in testifying to the
very commendable and interesting collection which,
through the zeal and enthusiasm of a committee of
Boston ladies, was sent to Chicago to be placed in the
large parlors of the State Building, these latter having
been set apart for their especial use. Although it was
not until the time of opening the Exposition had nearly
arrived that this committee was appointed, the articles
collected lent great interest to the building, consisting
as they did of pictures (one an excellent Copley), auto-
graphs and manuscript documents, dresses, bonnets and
other articles of wearing apparel of the Revolutionary
period.
Too great credit for the success of the Massachnsetta
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 25
State Building cannot be given to these ladies, by whose
earnestness and interest so many articles of priceless
value to their owners were committed to the care of
the Board, whose members are glad of this opportunity
to acknowledge the hearty and enthusiastic support
which they received from the ladies having this especial
collection under their charge. From Cape Cod were
sent a number of articles, mostly pictures, having to do
with the annals of that historic ground. An account
of the Massachusetts State Building at Chicago would
be incomplete indeed did it not contain especial refer-
ence to a unique collection of photographs and auto-
graphs which was made possible through the generosity
and public spirit of Mrs. Maria S. Potter of Boston.
Not to enumerate them all, it may perhaps be not inap-
propriate to call attention to a few from among the
many which certainly were looked at, studied and ap-
preciated by many thousands of visitors during the
six months of the Exposition. An autograph letter of
Hawthorne in a frame which Ukewise contained an ex-
cellent likeness of him called vividly to mind a per-
sonality of whom Massachusetts has always been justly
proud; while side by side with this was a photograph
of James Bussell Lowell, with a copy of one of his
beautiful verses in his own handwriting. Who can
measure the interest with which the numberless visitors
gazed upon the face of Oliver Wendell Holmes, framed
as it was with a copy of " Old Ironsides,'* a copy, too, on
26 BBPORT OF BOABD OF
which the ink was scarcely dry, he having made the same
but a few months before the opening of the Exposition ?
Those who were present will surely never forget the
interesting occasion when Dr. Smith, the author of
*^ America,'' saw his own face before him and read his
own manuscript of this our national hymn. Nor can
one forget the verses and portrait of Lucy Larcom, hung
on the walls of the State Building on the day of her
death, or a manuscript of beautiful verses by Julia Ward
Howe in memoriam of T. C. Crawford. A photograph
of Bishop Brooks, accompanied by the famous tribute
to this great man in the handwriting of that other great
divine, James Freeman Clarke, was read and pondered
over by many. These are but a few examples taken
from this interesting collection. They surely proved to
be a great feast to those who gave the time to care-
fully examine themi, and surely did they lend their full
measure of interest to this interesting building. It would
scarcely be possible to call attention to each of the
many articles loaned to the Massachusetts Board of
World's Fair Managers by individuals within the State.
Beference may yet be appropriately made to a large
mahogany secretary once used by General George Wash-
ington while he was in headquarters in Cambridge, to
a red walnut writing-desk brought over to this country
from England in the latter half of the seventeenth
century, and to a piece of the manor house in Scrooby,
within which were held those many meetings culminat-
WOHLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 27
ing In the departure from England and the arrival in
Plymouth of those whose steadfastness of purpose and
abiding faith have been the admiration of all succeeding
generations.
These lines will in part serve their purpose if they
recall to the minds of those who visited the building
the great interest which its contents awakened. They
should likewise testify to those of Massachusetts who
were unable to visit the Exposition that the building
and its contents were in every way worthy of the State
and of her glorious history.
The twelfth day of October, 1892, being the four
hundredth anniversary of the discovery by Christopher
Columbus of the land to which was given the name
of America, was, by the Exposition authorities, set
apart as dedication day, the Exposition buildings
being then dedicated with proper ceremonies and ex-
ercises. Although the Massachusetts State Building
was at that time very far from completion, it was
determined to take advantage of the presence in
Chicago of the Chief Executive of the Commonwealth,
to whom the building should be turned over, that he
might dedicate it to the uses for which it was erected.
Most informally, therefore, on Saturday morning, Octo-
ber 13, the building was visited by His Excellency Gov.
William E. Russell, accompanied by the delegation from
the Massachusetts Legislature. There they were received
by the Executive Commissioner, who, in a few words.
30 BBPOBT OF BOABD OF
the exception of May 1 and June 15 — the day set
apart for the German Government — no larger number
visited the grounds than on ^' Massachusetts Day.**
In the evening, the Chicago Society of the Sons of
Massachusetts tendered to His Excellency the Governor
and the delegation accompanpng him a public banquet
in the Auditorium Hotel, a courtesy which was a mer-
ited and pleasant tribute from the . exiled sons of the
State to her chief magistrate, — a courtesy, too, which
was fiilly appreciated by her citizens as an honor paid
to the Commonwealth.
In a communication addressed to them by a com-
mittee representing the heads of the several depart-
ments in connection with the Exposition, the Massa-
chusetts Board of World's Fair Managers were asked
to loan the State Building for the purpose of holding a
reception which these gentlemen desired to give in
recognition of the services rendered to the Exposition
by the Commissioners from foreign countries, the
Board of Lady Managers, the National Conunission and
the State Commissioners. Regarding this request as a
compliment to the building which had been erected by
the Conmionwealth, the Board were very glad to grant
the permission. This reception given by the exposition
officials was one of the most brilliant social functions
connected with the Exposition. It was freely said that
no social events which took place on the Exposition
grounds were more successful or more enjoyable than
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 31
were those held within the Massachusetts State Build-
ing.
The Board are of opinion that the money expended
by the Commonwealth in thus returning civilities ex-
tended by the Exposition authorities, by foreign com-
missions and by the National Commission was well
expended and redounded to the credit and good name
of the State.
The Massachusetts State Building called forth so
much praise, being a reproduction, in part, of a house
well known to Bostonians of a generation since, that
it has seemed to the Board its architectural features
should be noted. Knowing of no one better quali-
fied to do this, they have asked its architects, Messrs.
Peabody & Steams of Boston, to furnish them for this
report a few words in connection therewith.
In a letter received from them under date of Jan.
16, 1894, Messrs. Peabody & Steams make use of the
following words : —
In casting about for models that might fitly recall New
England sarroandings, the . old State Hoase at the head of
State Street, and the Hancock mansion, which once stood on
Beacon Hill, seemed to offer the best possible types. This
Hancock hoase, with its terraced gardens, was the most pict-
uresque as well as the most architectural of these two build-
ings. For these reasons it was selected as a model. But
the Massachusetts house was never intended to be, in abso-
lute strictness, a copy of the old Hancock mansion. The
old house would have seemed lost in the company of the
32 REPOBT OF BOAKD OP
large fair buildings, and larger accommodations were required
by the State Commissioners ; besides, the instructions, from
those in charge in Chicago, were distinct, that the State
buildings should, in all cases, be something more than modest
private houses. In this way it came about that the Massa-
chusetts house was an enlarged and enriched version of the
home of the bold signer of the Declaration of Independence.
The valuable quality in the design of the original Han-
cock house was the air of aristocratic distinction and reserve
and dignity that it bore, without losing a homelike and com-
fortable appearance. Every endeavor was made to retain
these virtues in the new building, but its greater size made
additional features necessary. In adding these, old models
were closely followed; the columns and gable over the en-
trance were almost transcripts of those of a well-known man-
sion at Danvers, and the lantern, raised upon the roof and
surmounted by a codfish vane, was modelled on ancient lines.
This lantern was added to the building in deference to the
orders that the building must be made to look like a State
building rather than a private house. By setting the terrace
wall back to the building line and calling the whole raised
terrace an essential part of the structure the raised conrt
that surrounded the house was permitted by the authorities,
in spite of the rule against enclosed front yards. As in the
old house, this raised terrace, with its old-fashioned fences
and well-stocked flower beds, added more than any one featore
to the look of dignified repose which pleased visitors to the
Massachusetts house.
Once within the house, no attempt was made to follow the
line of the Hancock house. To make a commodious and
simple interior in keeping with the exterior was the single
aim in view. The staircase, with its broad landing and triple
window, is like many that remain in Portsmouth and New-
port. The mahogany doors and white door frames and man-
WORLD'S PATR MANAGERS. 33
tels and wainscots all followed the old patterns. The hall
was tiled with red brick tiles, browned with oil and wax.
In the general office the wainscot and the fireplace were
made of Dutch blue tiles; hewn beams showed in the ceil-
ing; leather fire-buckets hung from the tall mantel shelf.
The sashes were filled with leaded glass, painted with the
arms of early New England settlers, and the room altogether
was such as might have been, although it followed no definite
model.
While the Massachusetts house seemed to be built of granite,
unfortunately this was a deceit, the well-worked granite blocks
being really of staff. Like the larger buildings of the Fair,
much of the house is, hence, unfit for removal. The State,
however, still has some property there in the shape of mahog-
any doors, handsome inside finish, tiles, mantels, fireplaces,
stairwork and stained glass.
In October, 1892, upon the resignation of Gen. John
W. Corcoran to assume the duties of Justice of the Su-
perior Coui-t of Massachusetts to which he had been
appointed, His Excellency Gov. Wm. E. Russell nomi-
nated in his stead Gen. Francis A. Walker, who, at the
first meeting of the Board thereafter, was elected to be
its chairman.
Beferring to the Appendix, where will be found a
list of those Massachusetts exhibitors who were granted
medals and diplomas, the Board wishes to briefly state
the system under which these were distributed :
Each of the great departments of the Exposition had
assigned to it a body of jurors, consisting, in each case,
of approximately fifty men and women. To these juiotb
34 BBPORT OF BOABD OF
was assigned the daty of examining and reporting upon
the different exhibits, in some cases one juror alone
examining the exhibit, while in others the examining
board consisted of three or more. Upon the written
report of this juror or board of jurors (no protest hav-
ing been lodged), the report of the whole body of jurors
in each separate department was based. The examina-
tion of exhibits having been concluded, the findings of
the jury, after having received the approval of its chair-
man,, was sent to the Bureau of Awards, the official
representative of the National Commission, for its en-
dorsement. The decision of this Board was final. By
them will be distributed medals and diplomas to those
whose exhibits were considered worthy of this distinc-
tion, though, in all probability, the Bureau of Awards
will consider it advantageous to make actual delivery of
the same through the medium of the Boards representing
the several States.
Twenty-three thousand medals and diplomas in all,
approximately, will be distributed. Of these, about
one-half will be awarded to American exhibitors, the
balance going to foreign nations. To the Common-
wealth, as an exhibitor, and to the individual represent-
atives of her many industries, were awarded about six
hundred medals and diplomas.
It must be understood that the report as herein made
as to the distribution of medals and awards is based on
the latest information received from the Bureau of
WOBLD'S PAIB MANAGERS. 35
Awards in connection with the Exposition. The Board
doubts not that there will be some changes, bat they
have endeavored to give herein the best and most trust-
worthy information which they could obtain.
Immediately after the closing of the Exposition, on the
thirty-first day of October, the Board of World's Fair
Managers busied themselves with such exhibits as were
within their control, to see that they were properly
packed and as speedily shipped as circumstances would
allow. There was considerable delay in this work, but
perhaps no more than was natural under the circum-
stances. The first articles to claim their attention were
the interesting and valuable relics which had been loaned,
to them for use in the State Building. Feeling the
responsibility which rested upon them, so tkr as the
pictures were concerned, they decided to have them all
taken from the walls of the State Building and sent to
the store of an experienced picture dealer to be properly
packed, and thence sent direct to each owner by express.
The articles which the Essex Institute had so kindly
loaned were turned over to their agents in the building,
who attended to the packing; while the committee of
ladies who had generously provided a collection, which
was in the ladies' parlor, received them from the Board,
attending to the shipment themselves. The balance of
the articles in the building, such as furniture, gas-fittings,
windows, tiles, fireplace furnishings and the like, were
all packed under the superintendence of the Board and
36 REPORT OP BOARD OF
shipped by freight to Boston, where they were distributed
among their respective owners. There was, however,
within the State Building a number of pictures of Mas-
sachusetts men and women which had been either given to
the Board or purchased. These, being the property of
the Commonwealth, the Board of Managers have turned
over to the Governor and Council, with the suggestion
that they be hung in Memorial Hall, in the extension
to the State House.
The packing of the several State exhibits was hastened
as much as possible, all of the articles being forwarded
by freight. It was not, however, until the very last days
of January that the last shipment was received.
Perhaps the greatest responsibility which came to the
Board was the care and final disposition of the works
of art, to the value of $140,000, which artists and pri-
vate owners had generously loaned them that the dis-
play of the Commonwealth in the Fine Arts Building
might be representative and worthy. Great delay was
experienced in the packing and shipping of these,
largely owing to the very severe wintry weather in
Chicago, preventing the packers from doing long-con-
tinuous work in a building which had within it no means
of heating. The two cars, however, which contained
these works of art finally reached Boston during the last
week of January, being consigned to the Charitable Me-
chanic Association Building, the basement of which was
generously loaned to the Board for the purpose of
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 37
receiving and unpacking these pictures. This latter
work was given over into the charge of Mr. J. Eastman
Chase, the Board having its agent there to receive and
account for the pictures as per the inventory received
from the chief of the department. The condition in
which the pictures were received indicated very great
care on the * part of the packers in Chicago, but little
damage having been done to the frames, and practically
no damage at all to the works of art themselves. Those
frames which needed repairs were taken by Mr. Chase
to his place of business, where the work was done. It
was necessary that great despatch should be used in the
unpacking and delivery of these goods by reason of the
fact that it was impossible to secure insurance to a greater
value than $80,000. Within six days from the time the
pictures were unloaded from the cars they were delivered
to their respective owners or to the office of Mr. Chase.
It was with pain that the Board approached the dis-
posal of the Massachusetts State Building, which for the
six months of the Exposition had been a veritable
Mecca for so very many of the citizens of the Com-
monwealth.
Several plans which they had in view had to be
abandoned and at the end the Board were obliged to
resort to one of those many wrecking companies, so
called, to whom were sold most of the State and many
of the Exposition buildings. By personal interviews
with private investors the Board hoped to be able to
38 KEPORT OF BOARD OF
preserve the building. These efforts fSEiiling and the
time becoming very short within which the Board were
compelled to remove it, it was determined to dispose
of the house to the highest bidder.
This action resulted in the sale for the sum of three
hundred dollars, a sum which appears very small when
compared with the cost, and yet an amount fully equally
to that obtained by other States whose buildings were
much larger than that of Massachusetts.
The cost to the State of the part which she took in
the Exposition cannot justly be measured by the state-
ment of expenditures as shown hereafter. Much of this
cost consisted of the expense of collecting together
the so-called State exhibit, most of which, as will be
seen by the several chapters relating to them individ-
ually, have not been dissipated, but remain intact to
serve as objects of study and comparison, from which to
mark future progress.
The amount expended on the collection of the public
school exhibit would have been well spent indeed, if only
that the citizens of the State might have a pedagogical
museum, from which one might study and compare the
methods of instruction in use in different parts of the
State. This long-hoped-for object the Board is glad to
be able to report has been accomplished, they having
turned over to the State Board of Education the entire
public school exhibit to form the nucleus of a pedagogical
museum, for the support of which the last Legislature
made an appropriation.
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 39
The admirable State exhibit in the Bureau of Charities
and Correction has been placed in the custody of the
Board of Lunacy and Charity, in whose offices provision
has been made for its installation and care; while the
agricultural collection, together with the comprehensive
geological exhibit, have been deposited as State property
with the Agricultural College, at Amherst. The State
Board of Health has given the necessary space in their
rooms for the complete and instructive exhibit to which
the interesting paper of Professor Sedgwick, printed here-
with, refers at length.
These exhibits have been so disposed that they may,
while remaining the property of the Commonwealth, serve
as a lasting memorial of the Exposition, and as an his-
torical record of the stage of advancement attained by
Massachusetts in humane, philanthropic and educational
work, giving at the same time valuable opportunities for
study to her citizens as well as to visitors from other
States and countries.
The remaining members of the Board find great satis-
faction, upon concluding this report, in stating that the
prestige of Massachusetts, as an exhibiting State, was
much enhanced through the influence exerted by the
Executive Commissioner, Mr. Hovey, who, besides at-
tending to the duties of his office, was able, as vice-
40 BSPOBT OF BOARD OF
president of the Executive Commissioners' Association,
to render signal services to the Exposition and its man-
agers. That such services were appreciated is evidenced
by the very notable testimonial presented to Mr. Hovey
by the chiefs of the thirteen principal departments, upon
the occasion of his departure from Chicago. That testi-
monial acknowledges in the strongest terms the work
which Mr. Hovey had done in connection with the great
exhibition. The Government of France, in recognition
of the educational, scientific and charitable work of Mas-
sachusetts, as exhibited in the Department of Liberal
Arts, has conferred upon Mr. Hovey the appointment of
Officer of the Academy.
WOBLD'8 FAIB HANA6EBS. 41
THE RUMFORD KITCHEN.
In the Department of Hygiene and Sanitation was
the exhibit known as **The Bamford Kitchen," an
outgrowth of the work in the application of the
principles of chemistry to the science of cooking,
which has for three years been carried on as an
educational agency by Mrs. Robert H. Richards, of
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Mrs.
John A. Abel, with pecuniary assistance from certain
public-spirited citizens of Boston.
The Massachusetts Board of World's Fair Managers,
recognizing the high scientific character of the work
of the New England Kitchen over which these ladies
preside, and believing that such a practical demon-
stration of the usefulness of domestic science could
not fail to be of advantage to multitudes of visitors
to the Columbian Exposition, invited Mrs. Richards
and Mrs. Abel to open the Rumford Kitchen, as it
is called, as a part of the exhibit of Massachusetts,
in connection with the Bureau of Hygiene and San-
itation.
In order to reduce, in some degree, the expenses of
the exhibit, the food cooked in the Rumford Kitchen
was sold under a concession from the administration
of the Exposition; but it should be understood that
it was not in any sense a money-making exhibit;
42 KBPORT OF BOARD OF
that nothing was cooked for the sake of being sold;
and that the exhibit was absolutely a scientifio and
educational one.
The Board refers with great pleasure to the very
interesting report of Mrs. Richards which follows, and
takes great satisfaction in the interest which this ex-
hibity endorsed as it was by the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, awakened among the visitors from all
parts of the world. The Board is confident that the
results following the expenditure of State money for the
purpose of making known the scientific work done by
Mrs. Richards and those associated with her must of
necessity be far-reaching and tend to popularize tiie
very great importance of the subject to which it re-
lated.
Boston, Dec. 27, 1893.
The Massackusetts Board of WorldTs Fair Managers^ Sears Build"
ing^ Boston,
Sirs : — At your request, I beg leave to submit the fol-
lowing report, having to do with the exhibit made under
your auspices under the name of the *' Rumford Kitchen."
The removal of the Bureau of Hygiene and Sanitation,
late in the season, from the Liberal Arts to the Anthropo-
logical Building necessitated an entire change of plans in re-
gard to this exhibit. A space thirty by forty feet was
secured near the south door of the Anthropological Building,
and on this was placed a one-story frame structure finished
as one room. The cost of the house was $700 ; that of
the drainage, which was not at all planned for by the Ex-
position authorities in laying out that part of the grounds,
was S429.87. The house not being ready by the 1st of
WOBLD'S FAm MANAGERS. 43
August, it became necessary to send everything by express.
On the other hand, the labor incident to the erection of this
building was very much less than it would have been earlier
in the season. The expense of the fittings and installation,
including models, charts, china, filters, etc., was $1,822.88,
of which sum $136.91 was for express alone. The total ex-
pense connected with this exhibit, including wages, the cost
of food, gas, ice and other incidentals, amounted to
$6,111.87. The total receipts from all sources, including
sale of food and sale of plant at the end of the Exposition,
amounted to $4,515, leaving a deficit of $1,596.87. From
the receipts for sale of food there was paid to the authori-
ties the sum of $890.63, the same being thirty per cent, of
the gross receipts. Contributions from public-spirited citi-
zens, amounting to $1,900, were made for the exhibit. The
apparatus and a part of the furniture was sold to the Uni-
versity of Chicago for $250. The china is at present stored.
The house remains intact, there being a possibility that
something may be obtained for it, it being in such shape as
to be readily removed and fitted for a dwelling. The models
and photographs which awakened so much interest have been
removed to Boston, and a large portion of the printed mat-
ter calling attention to the kitchen and the work done in
connection therewith, was left at Hull House, the College
Settlement in Chicago, for further distribution, the balance
of which was returned to Boston, being still in constant de-
mand.
The intention of the exhibit was to illustrate the present
state of knowledge in regard to the composition of materials
for human food, the means of making these materials most
available for nutrition, and the quantity of each necessary
for a working ration. It was also in part intended as a
centennial celebration of the services to humanity of a man
of Massachusetts birth and parentage, Benjamin Thompson^
44 BBFOBT OF BOABD OF
Count Ramford of Bavariat the first to apply the term
^^ science of nutrition " to the study of human food, and
the first to apply science to the preparation of food
materials.
Not the least valuable part of the exhibit consisted of the
series of pamphlets prepared for the Rumford Kitchen by
authorities in the several departments of science which re-
late to human food and nutrition. That such men as Pro«
fessors Remsen and Abel of Johns Hopkins University,
Professor Chittenden of Yale University, Professor Sedgwick
of the Institute of Technology, Professor Howell and others
were willing to prepare these scientific papers shows a great
step toward placing this branch of sanitary science in its
rightful place.
This series is not yet quite complete, though it will finally
appear in book form as a permanent result of the Chicago
Exposition.
The charts, diagrams and books of the exhibit were studied
with great eagerness and cannot but have given impetus to
the investigations in these directions; while the practical
outcome of the taste and relish of the food served was shown
in the fact that some ten thousand people were served dur-
ing the two months that the kitchen was open, between the
hours of twelve and two only, in a space so small as to
permit only thirty people to be seated at the same time.
In order to emphasize the facts above narrated, the food
was served in portions containing a definite amount of nutri-
tion, and the menu card on each table gave the requirement
for one-quarter of one day's ration, with the weight and
composition of each dish composing the meal. A choice of
two or three luncheons, for which the price was thirty cents,
was given each day, each containing three or four dishes,
though an extra price was made for a glass of milk, for a
cup of cocoa, tea or coffee.
I!
tr-\
i
~ik
'IT
t
I
i-
-CvJl.-.
r
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 45
The results which go to testify that this exhibit was a
recognized success are already apparent. The entire plant
of the exhibit was put into the experimental kitchen of the
Woman's Dormitories in connection with the University of
Chicago, which is now in Miss Daniell's charge, and the
work has attracted so much attention that not only has
the great hospital for the insane at Kankakee, 111., already
secured the services of the manager of the Boston Kitchen,
but the institutions and universities of our own State are
coming to the kitchen as to headquarters.
I take pleasure in saying that the successful carrying out
of the plan adopted is largely due to the interest taken in
and the energy given to the Rumford Kitchen by its man-
ager. Miss Maria Daniell of Boston, and by Mr. Arthur R.
Wilmarth of Jamaica Plain.
I remain, very respectfully,
Ellen H. Richards.
46 BBPOBT OF BOABD OF
FINE ARTS.
Preparatory to the collecting together of an exhibit
for the Fine Arts Section in Chicago, the chief of
this department, Mr. Halsey C. Ives, appointed in
several cities of the United States advisory commit-
tees to co-operate with him in the selection of pict-
ures which should best represent the work of the
artists of these several localities. For Massachusetts,
this committee consisted of Mr. J. J. Enneking,
chairman; Mr. Edmund C. Tarbell, Mr. Thomas
Allen, Mr. I. M. Gaugengigl, Mr. Daniel C. French,
and Mr. Frederick P. Vinton, secretary.
Soon after their appointment, a conference was held
between this committee and the Board of World's
Fair Managers, from which time until the pictures
were safely returned to their owners there was riotb-
ing but the heartiest co-operation between them.
Through the courtesy of the Massachusetts Chari-
table Mechanic Association there were placed at the
disposal both of the committee and of the Board
rooms within their building which were utilized by
the Board for the reception of pictures sent from all
parts of the State to be judged by the Advisory
Committee.
The Board of World's Fair Managers deemed it
wise that such pictures as should be selected to go
WOIILD'S FAm MANAGBRS. 47
to Chicago as representative of the work of Massa-
chusetts artists should be placed on exhibition, be-
lieving that the collection would be of interest to the
citizens of the State, and that even from the small
entrance fee charged enough revenue would be obtained
to liquidate the expenses incident to the collection
and exhibition of these works of art. For two weeks
the rooms were visited from ten in the morning until
ten in the evening by large numbers. The Board was
able to send to the Treasurer of the Commonwealth
a check for $455.25, as representing the net revenue
of the exhibition. At the close of the exhibition the
pictures were removed to the basement of the build-
ing, where, under the superintendence of Mr. J. East-
man Chase, they were packed and loaded on board
the cars for Chicago, arriving there in good condi-
tion within ten days of the date of their shipment.
Including oil paintings, water colors, sculpture, archi-
tectural drawings, and engravings and etchings, works
of art to the number of about three hundred were sent
to Chicago, of a total valuation of nearly $140,000.
From the time of their arrival in Chicago until
the day when they were loaded upon the cars for
their return, they were in the custody of the Expo-
sition authorities, the Massachusetts Board of World's
Fair Managers having during that period of time no
jurisdiction over them whatever. Included in the list
(Appendix C) of Massachusetts exhibitors to whom
48 REPORT OF BOARD OF
were awarded diplomas and medals for tibieir exhibits
will be found the names of those artists and archi-
tects within the Commonwealth who received such
commendation. The catalogue (Appendix D) show-
ing the names of those who exhibited in Chicago^
together with the titles of the works exhibited^ in-
cludes a large number of those best known in the State.
The Board takes pleasure in adding to this pre-
liminary report of theirs on the Department of Fine
Arts the following paper, written by the well-known
art critic, Mr. C. Howard Walker, which establishes
the position which the Commonwealth occupied in
this department : —
MASSACHUSETTS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS
AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION.
By C. Howabd Walkb&.
The work of Massachusetts artisans and architects at the
Colambian Exposition was by no means confined to the ex-
hibit of fine arts accredited to the State.
From the first conception of the Exposition Massachusetts
men contributed in each department of art, and the extent
of their contribution and its importance can best be judged
by citing the names of the artists and the extent and char-
acter of their work.
The general arrangement of the landscape gardening, the
idea of taking advantage of the waters of the lake by intro-
ducing lagoons and the plan of the grounds was by Messrs.
Olmsted & Codman of Brookline, and was developed and
carried to completion to a great extent by the late Mr. Cod-
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGBRS. 49
man, to whose acknowledged skill much of the very success-
ful effect of the grounds was due.
Of the architects of the principal buildings the following
were either residents of Massachusetts or were natives of
the State : Messrs. Peabody & Steams, architects of
Machinery Hall; Messrs. Van Brunt & Howe, architects
of the Electricity Building; Mr. Charles B. Atwood, archi-
tect of the Fine Arts Building, of the Casino and Peristyle,
the Terminal Station, the Forestry Building, and of the
numerous bridges, kiosks and monumental columns; Mr.
Sullivan, of Adler & Sullivan, architects of the Transporta-
tion Building; Mr. Henry Ives Cobb, architect of the Fish-
eries Building, and. Miss Sophia Hayden, architect of the
Woman's Building. Several of the smaller buildings, such
as the Merchant Tailors' Building, by Mr. Atwood, and the
Rhode Island Building, by Mr. Wilson, of Stone, Carpen-
ter & Wilson, were also by Massachusetts men.
In sculpture the State was represented by the work of
Mr. D. C. French, who was the sculptor of the statue of
the Republic, and of the figures in the two groups in front
of the main entrance to the Agricultural Building and in
the quadriga above the arch of the Peristyle.
In decoration, Mr. F. D. Millet, who had charge of the
decoration of the buildings, was a native of the State, as
was Mr. Edward Simmons, who decorated one of the domes
of the Liberal Arts Building.
In the exhibition of retrospective art Massachusetts was
represented by such names as those of AUston, Hunt, Fuller,
Fozcroft Cole, John Johnson. There were three Allstons,
of which the *^ Danse " was perhaps the most character-
istic ; three by Hunt, one of which was the '' Niagara " and
another the '^ Marguerite." The Fullers were an original
study for the *' Romany Girl" and the "Quadroon," the
latter one of the best examples of Fuller's work.
50 BEPOBT OF BOABD OF
CONTEMPORARY ART, -^ OIL PAINTINGS,
Total number in catalogue, .... 1,154
Sent from Massachusetts, 134
To those sent by the State should be added many paint-
ings by Massachusetts men which appeared in the exhibits
of Paris and New York. Amongst these were paintings by
F. D. Millet, Metcalf, Walter Gay, E. L. Weeks, Swain
Gifford, Childe Hassam, J. Appleton Brown, Theodore
Robinson, Bicknell and Edward Simmons — in all forty-
seven paintings.
In the contemporary exhibit there were pictures represent-
ative of most of the modern schools of painting, the in-
fluence of Paris, of Munich, of the Impressionists and of the
Italian masters each being evident.
About one-third of the paintings were landscapes, in
which was apparent a marked preference for quiet color and
atmospheric effect. Among the landscapists were Charles
Davis, who sent four canvases; Charles H. Hayden, repre-
sented by three scenes of New England pastures; Thomas
Allen, whose '^Moonrise" was one of the best examples of
his work; Enneking, whose '* October Twilight" was full of
warmth of color; and El well, who sent a ^' Moonrise in
Holland."
Marines were by W. E. Norton, who sent, among others,
his '^Return of the Herring Fleet;" A. H. Munsell, a paint-
ing entitled '^Ship Ahead," and Walter Dean, whose
''Peace" was a large canvas representing the white
squadron.
Portraiture was exceptionally well represented by Benson's
''Portrait in White" and "Girl with Red Shawl," the lat-
ter one of the frankest pieces of fine color handling in the
Exposition; by Tarbell's "My Sister Lydia," very simply
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 51
and sweetly painted ; by the excellent series of portraits by
Vinton, and especially by his ''Portrait of a Lady," which
had already been accorded high rank at the Salon, and by
DeComp's skilful '' Carnation and Black." Of the remain-
ing portraits those by Mrs. Perry of two children, one with
violin and the other with 'cello, suggested the work of some
of the sixteenth century Italians, and were painted with
much poetic feeling. F. M, Freer, E. G. Niles, E. H.
Barnard, Ernest L. Major, I. H. Caliga, W. W. Church-
ill, Jr., C. A. Cranch, Miss Putnam, Miss Klumpke, Miss
Hallowell, Miss Fairchild, and Mrs. Whitman were each
represented by portraits.
Of the paintings with figures. Miss M. L. Macumber's
''Annunciation" and "Love Awakening Memory" had
great merit, beautiful in color and composition and
painted with skill; they were of exceptionally high rank.
Gaugengigl sent " The Rehearsal," " The Manuscript,"
" The Chanson d'Amour," each with much expression of
motive and of character; Charles Sprague Pearce sent a
" Village Funeral in Picardy," and Ernest Major a " St.
Genevieve " of somewhat the same school. TarbelFs " In
the Orchard" was one of the nearest approaches to im-
pressionism in the Massachusetts exhibit, and was full of
sunlight and plain air. Tompkins* " Good Friday " was in
sharp contrast, dark and sombre, but simply painted.
Stacey Tolman's "Etcher" was well studied in values of
light and shade. Kronberg's " Behind the Footlights,"
of a dancer in scarlet and crimson, was a successful
^^tour de force"
There should be mention made also of Childe Hassam's
suggestive views of Parisian and of New York streets, of
Walter Gay's studies of monks and of Parisian charity
schools, of Simmons' " Carpenter's Son," Metcalf's " Tuni-
sian Market," Swain Gifford's landscapes, E. L. Weeks'
>l
tt
52 REPORT OF BOARD OF
Bcenes in India, and F. D. Millet's excellent series of
figure composition, such as ''The Rook and Pigeon,"
Anthony Van Corlear's ''The Trumpeter" and others.
There were but eleven water colors, — several by Thomas
Allen, a landscape by C. F. Pierce, a " Winter Moonlight
by H. A. Hallett, a strong study of "Windswept Beaches
by E. C. Cabot, and several water colors by Ross Turner,
his studies of Japanese pottery being especially skilfnl.
The four pastels by J. Appleton Brown were of great
beauty.
Of the 490 black and whites, pen-and-ink and wash draw-
ings upon the ofiScial catalogue, none were sent directly from
Massachusetts, but 69 of those catalogued were by Massa-
chusetts artists, and those were amongst the best in the
exhibition. Of them the exceptionally fine series of pen
drawings by C. D. Gibson, sent by " Life," deserves espe-
cial mention. Next to these the ten drawings by F. G.
Attwood, also made for "Life," were full of humor and of
the best qualities of the caricaturist. There were also draw-
ings by F. D. Millet, F. O. Small, W. L. Taylor, and six
pencil drawings by C. H. Woodbury, treated with great
freedom and breadth.
ENGRAVINGS. ETCHINGS. ETC.
Total number in catalogue, 627
Sent by Massachusetts, 46
To these should be added six etchings by Swain Gifford
and thirteen engravings by Elbridge Eingsley.
Closson had the largest exhibit of engravings, those after
Rembrandt, Conture, Fuller and Thayer having especial re-
finement; Dana's landscapes, after J. Appleton Brown and
F. Hopkinson Smith, were also excellent.
Wm. P. Cleaves sent a series of six New Hampshire views.
i
t J
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 53
S. A. Schoff, a number of etchings and three engrarings.
H. E. Sylvester, a series of engravings for the Century
Company.
Charles A. Walker, a fine collection of reproductive etch-
ings, after Daubigny, Corot, Dupr^, Tryon, Maure and Meis-
sonier.
SCULPTURE.
Total number in catalogue, 148
Sent by Massachusetts, S4
Of these the most important were the following: ^^ Death
and the Sculptor," by D. C. French, a very beautiful group,
and the "Youthful Sophocles" and a " Hunting Nymph," by
John Donoghue. Wm. Ordway Partridge contributed casts
of the Shakespeare statue for Lincoln Park, Chicago, and of
the Hamilton statue for the Hamilton Club, Brooklyn. Max
Bachmann's "Son of Man" and Kitson's "Christ Crucified"
and " Age of Stone " were the other statues sent. Smaller
figures of merit were the " Young Orphans" and " On the
Banks of the Oise," by Miss Buggies (Mrs. Kitson) ; the
"Music of the Sea," by H. H. Kitson; "Titania and
Bottom," by F. G. Wesselhoeft. There were ideal heads
by Miss Bradley, Miss Whitney, Mrs. Kitson, W. O. Part-
ridge, and portrait busts by D. C. French, W. O. Partridge,
Kitson, Bachmann and Miss Bradley.
ARCHITEGTURAL DRAWINGS,
Total number in catalogue, 268
Sent from Massachusetts, 47
To these should be added two drawings by Shepley, Rutan
& Coolidge, one by Herbert Everett, one by Peabody,
Steams & Furber and four by Walker & Kimball.
54 BBPORT OF BOARD OF
Of drawings of public buildings there were five of the
Carnegie Music Hall, Pittsburgh, by Longfellow, Alden &
Harlow, and one of the Cambridge City Hall, by the same
firm; a design for an alteration of the old State House,
Boston, by E. M. Wheelwright, and two drawings of the
Public Library, Omaha, by Walker & Kimball, and the Art
Institute at Chicago, by Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge.
The drawings of business buildings shown were those of
the Equitable Building at Denver, by Andrews, Jaques &
Rantoul; the Ames Building, Boston, by Shepley, Rutan &
Coolidge, and the McCague Bank Building and the Nebraska
Telephone Building, Omaha, by Walker & Kimball.
Church architecture was well represented by designs for
St. Matthew's Cathedral, Dallas, Texas; All Saints* Church,
Dorchester, Mass., and St. Paul's Church, Brockton, Mass.,
all by Crum, Wentworth <& Goodhue ; St. Augustine's Church,
Boston, by Sturgis & Cabot, and the Mount Vernon Church,
Boston, the Presbyterian Church, Omaha, and a design for
the Walnut Street Church, Brookline, Mass., by Walker &
Kimball.
Andrews, Jaques & Rantoul sent drawing of proposed
Colorado College at Colorado Springs. H. Langford Warren
sent designs for proposed Conservatory of Music for the
Troy Female Seminary and views of the Troy Orphan Asy-
lum. Sturgis & Cabot sent drawings of Rexleigh School^
Salem, N. Y., and E. M. Wheelwright, design of the
Hospital for Contagious Diseases and for the Shaw Memo-
rial School, Boston. Peabody & Stearns contributed a frame
of admirable office sketching and a drawing of Machinery
HaU. J. C. Schweinfurth sent his competitive design for the
New York Fine Arts Society Building.
House architecture was represented by designs by Andrews,
Jaques & Rantoul; Longfellow, Alden & Harlow; Rotch A
Tilden; J. C. Schweinfurth; H. Langford Warren; Wheel-
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 65
Wright & Haven ; Peabody, Steams & Furber ; Little, Brown
& Moore and Walker & Kimball.
There were some excellent sketches of foreign architecture
by D wight Binney ; by George F. Newton, two especially fine
architectural water colors of the CoUeoni statue, Venice, and
of a baa relief at 8. Maria dis Miracoli, Venice, by Joseph
Lindon Smith.
The American architectural drawings throughout were of a
different character from those received from abroad, the lat-
ter being in most cases careful scale drawings, rendered in
line, with shadows cast; the English prospective drawings
were very carefully done, and evidently had received more
study than those of the United States.
The drawings from Massachusetts were in most instances
perspectives in water color or in pen-and-ink, were often
cleverly sketched, and bore comparison favorably with the
remainder of the United States exhibit in architecture, but
they were not as accurate, as carefully drawn, or as faith-
fully studied as the work from abroad. Most of the designs
from Massachusetts were of semi-picturesque character, very
little of it being along so-called academic lines.
In other buildings than the Art Building there were occa-
sional exhibits of art from Massachusetts, — such, for in-
stance, as the exhibition of architectural designs from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which was very sat-
isfactory; the excellent exhibit of the School of Drawing
and Painting of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, includ-
ing work in oil and water color painting and in decoration.
The public schools of the State showed their work in draw-
ing, which was susceptible of improvement, though good as
a whole. Of industrial art there were numerous exhibits,
the principal ones being of iron and brass work by the Mur-
dock Parlor Grate Company, and of colored faience by At-
wood & Grueby, and some excellent exhibits of china
painting, pottery and wood carving.
56 BBPORT OF BOARD OF
In the Woman's Building a number of embroiderieB ex-
hibited in the exceptionally fine exhibit of the Society of
Associated Artists of New York were by Massachnsetto
women.
It will be seen from this report that of the thirteen im-
portant buildings of the Exposition, eight were designed by
Massachusetts architects, or by natives of the State; that
the Machinery Hall and Colonnade, Electricity Building, and
Casino and Peristyle of the Court of Honor were due to the
genius of men of this State, and that the general scheme of
the Exposition grounds was conceived in Massachusetts.
Of the 2,802 numbers upon the official catalogue of the
exhibit of fine arts 364 can be accredited to Massachusetts.
The juries of acceptance were especially careful in making
their selections, and it is due to this fact that the exhibit
was not numerically stronger, fully sixty per cent, of the
paintings, etc., entered being rejected. But it is also due
to this fact that everything sent had merit.
WOKLD'S PAIR MAKAGEBS. 57
HORTICULTURE.
The collection of an exhibit for the Horticultural
Department in connection with the World's Columbian
Exposition gave the Board of World's Fair Managers
more anxiety than perhaps did any other exhibit over
which they had control. This was due, in a large
measure, to the lack of interest on the part of those
who would naturally be expected to make contributions.
After repeated consultations with the members of the
Horticultural Society, as well as with the representa-
tives of the State Board of Agriculture, it was deter-
mined that no efforts should be made to display the
fruits and vegetables of the Commonwealth, and that
the Board would utilize only the space which had been
set aside for it, both within the Horticultural Building
and on the Wooded Island, to display its plants, its
shrubs and its flowers. Upon arriving at this deter-
mination, the Board appointed Mr. J. H. Woodford as
its agent to collect the plants which should be installed
within the Horticultural Building, and gave over to
Mr. Jacob W. Manning, the well-known nurseryman of
Beading, the space assigned to the Commonwealth on
the Wooded Island, within which to make an individ-
ual exhibit.
Through the generosity and public spirit of many
citizens of the State owning private conservatories, Mr.
58 BEPOBT OF BOABD OF
Woodford was enabled to bring together a collection
of plants which did full credit to the space assigned to
the Commonwealth. These plants were taken care of
by the chief of the Department of Hortioaltore, at the
expense of the Exposition, and at its end were, by the
Massachusetts Board of World's Fair Managers, given
to the Commissioners of the South Park of Chicago,
as a contribution of the Commonwealth to ornament
this, one of the many beautiful parks of that city.
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 59
AGRICULTURE.
Soon after their appointment the Massachusetts Board
of World's Fair Managers had a conference with the
State Board of Agriculture, from which time the Board
was in constant consultation and co-operation with Mr.
Francis H. Appleton, a member of the State Board.
With him were made repeated visits to Amherst,
where are erected the State Agricultural College and
the Experiment Station, both of which were asked to
lend their co-operation to the collecting together and
final installation of an exhibit of such agricultural in-
terests as should reflect the most credit upon the State.
When it became necessary to take action in collect-
ing specimens of crops, the Board appointed as its
agent Mr. John C. Dillon, a resident of Amherst, who
had at one time been connected with the Agricultural
College. Through the hearty co-operation which came
to him from the president and professors of the Agri-
cultural College, from the authorities of the 'Experiment
Station, as well as from the farmers throughout the
State, Mr. Dillon was enabled to collect an exhibit of
crops which, with the aid of diagrams, charts and statis-
tics, showed very satisfactorily the agricultural interests
of the Commonwealth.
To this exhibit the Gypsy Moth Commission fur-
nished a case, which, though small in dimensions,
showed in a highly graphic manner the important work
60 KEPORT OP BOARD OP
accomplished by ihem.. Within this case was a miniar
tare tree upon which might be seen the worm of the
gypsy moth, showing the leaves it fed upon, its method
of destruction, and also the birds which are its enemies.
This was an instructive lesson, and was in itself the
justification for the expenditure which had been made
by the Gypsy Moth Commission in their endeavors to
wipe out this pest, and it cannot be doubted that the
lessons which it taught were of value to the scientists
of other States in that they saw the advantage which
might be taken by them of the investigations and re-
search already made by the Conmionwealth and at its
expense, if it should happen that their own States
should become the home of the gypsy moth.
Such portion of the agricultural exhibit as originally
came from the Agricultural College, together with speci-
mens of crops which had been collected from different
parts of the State, were returned to the college, while
the contributions of the Experiment Station were sent
to its officers. The exhibit of the Gypsy Moth Com-
mission has by the Board of Managers been placed in
the keeping of the State Board of Agriculture until
such time as the Gypsy Moth Commission secures
rooms of its own within which to place it.
A list of articles exhibited within this section ap-
pears in Appendix D, while the names of those to
whom awards were made in the agricultural section
of the Commonwealth will be found in Appendix C.
WORLD'S TAIR MAKAGEBS. 61
In calling attention to Mr. Dillon's report, annexed
hereto, the Board desires to express its full appre-
ciation of the co-operation which it at all times
received from him and to thus place on record its
hearty approval of the results attained through his
energy and enthusiasm.
Mck88€Lcku8eU8 Boavd of World* 8 Fair Managers : —
Dear Sirs: — In obedience to your instructions, I beg to
submit a report of my work in preparing and arranging the
Massachusetts exhibit of farm crops, and what, so far as I
am informed and believe, was the lesson which this exhibit
taught and the end which it accomplished.
On receiving my appointment as your agent in August,
1892, I gave the matter my serious consideration, and after
consulting many gentlemen of recognized judgment and ex-
perience I decided that to make a truly representative pres-
entation of the crops of the State it would be desirable to
enlist the sympathy and assistance of the agricultural socie-
ties and the granges of Patrons of Husbandry throughout
the State.
I therefore prepared and mailed copies of Circular No. 1
(copy sent herewith) to the secretaries of all the agricult-
ural societies, the lecturers of district granges, and to many
other parties in the State. The responses I received were
very cordial and encouraging, most of the secretaries send-
ing me complimentary tickets to their exhibitions, and all
promising to do what they could to further the objects
of the Commission and to contribute to the credit of the
State.
During the months of September and October I attended
twenty-six agricultural fairs and solicited and secured the
promise of many of the best specimens of farm crops. I
62 BBPORT OF BOABD OP
also obtained from the secretarieB of those societies whose
fairs I had been unable to attend lists of those who had
taken premiums; and, by correspondence with these gentle-
men, I secured the promise of many valuable contributions
to the State exhibit.
The object I sought and measurably secured by these ar-
rangements was to obtain a liberal supply of superior speci-
mens for our exhibit, and to avoid incurring unnecessary
expense by collecting inferior specimens or superfluous speci-
mens, even though the quality of them might be all that
could be desired.
In letters soliciting contributions I usually enclosed a copy
of Circular No. 2 (also sent herewith), which saved me the
labor of stating the general purposes of the Commission.
To secure compliance with the requirements of the chief
of the Agricultural Department of the World's Columbian
Exposition, I bad printed and mailed three hundred copies
each of Circulars No. 3 and No. 4. No. B contains a
series of questions relating to the locality, ownership and
cultivation of each specimen contributed, and No. 4 contains
the same questions, with specimen answers to show oontribu-
ix>T8 just what information it is desired that they should fur-
nish. These data, when received, were digested and the
substance of them copied on the description cards, No. 5
(sample herewith) , which were then attached to the specimens
for the information of committees and visitors at the World's
Fair.
In conference with you. Secretary Sessions of the State
Board, and Secretary Appleton of the Massachusetts Society
for Promoting Agriculture, it was decided that it would be
impossible to make a candid presentation of the agriculture
of Massachusetts without acknowledging the growing impor-
tance of commercial fertilizers; and, therefore, permission
was given to the Bowker Fertilizer Company and the Bradley
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 63
Fertilizer Company, the two principal fertilizer manufacturers
in Massachusetts, to exhibit photographs of crops grown on
these manures.
By your permission I hired a hall in Amherst for the re-
ception and storage of specimens, and on the 19th of De-
cember the collection was inspected by yourself and Mr.
Appleton, and by your Instructions I prepared and sent to
you a sketch of design for the arrangement of the exhibit
at the World's Fair.
I was also instructed to obtain specimens of tobacco for
the formation of a separate exhibit of leaf tobacco, and I
accordingly secured a collection of a hundred samples of
Havana and Connecticut seed-leaf tobacco grown in Mas-
sachusetts, which I deposited with Mr. C. A. Wilson of
North Hadley, a practical grower, buyer and packer of to-
bacco, who kindly undertook to keep it in the best possi-
ble condition until it should be required for exhibition at
the World's Fair.
It was arranged that the exhibit should comprise thirteen
specimens of soils taken from different parts of the State ;
and, as Prof. W. P. Brooks of the Massachusetts Agricult-
ural College was engaged in making collections of soils for
other departments of the Exposition, I arranged with him
to provide additional samples for the crop exhibit.
In March, 1893, under your direction, I packed and
forwarded the specimens constituting the crop exhibit, and
also the collections furnished by the Massachusetts Agri-
cultural College and the Massachusetts and Hatch Experi-
ment Stations in the forestry exhibit, and to the exhibit
of agricultural colleges and experiment stations, to Chicago.
On the 15th of April I went with you and your assist-
ants to Chicago, and found all the exhibits in my charge
had arrived safely, and I saw to their delivery at their
several destinations.
64 EEFORT OF BOABD OF
On account of the exceptionally bad weather, strikes of
workmen and other hindrances, the contractors were
somewhat behindhand in building the stall; but as soon
as this was ready I furnished it with glass showcases and
other fixtures; and, under your directions, I arranged and
displayed the specimens I had collected and brought so as
to present a plain but effective exhibition of the agricult-
ural production of the State.
The stall itself consisted of an enclosure twenty-six by
fifty-six feet, an area of 1,456 square feet, and was sur-
rounded by a substantial wall, three feet high, composed
of '^ staff," with massive pillars, five feet high, at each
corner and at the main entrance, bearing the arms and
motto of Massachusetts. This was painted a light gray
or granite color, similar to that used on the outside of
the Massachusetts State Building. On this broad outer
wall were displayed twenty-six varieties of field com,
ranging from the small Early Flint to the largest varieties
of Dent corn. These ears of corn were all of the most
perfect types, and each one was nailed to the wall to
prevent its being carried away; but so anxious were many
of the visitors to obtain the seed that in spite of con-
stant watchfulness it was again and again mutilated, and
had to be replaced from the stock which had been kept
to provide for emergencies. On each of the comer posts
was displayed a bale of hay of different varieties of
grass furnished by the Massachusetts Agricultural College,
and inside each comer was a pyramid of com on the
stalk, ranging from the small sweet com, three feet high,
1K> the tall Southern White, showing a growth of fully
sixteen feet.
Two upright glass cases at the main entrance contained
exceptionally fine samples of com and tobacco, and a row
of glass centre cases, each sixteen feet long and fiUed with
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 65
superior samples of tobacco and field, sweet and pop com
and beans, extended east and west. Parallel with these
and running down the middle of the stall were two tables
on which were displayed the Bradley and Bowker collec-
tions of photographs of Massachusetts crops; and to show
that these were no fancy pictures samples of the crops
they represented, or of better ones, were arranged on the
screen behind them. For instance, one picture showed a
field of timothy yielding two and a half tons per acre,
while close behind it was a sample of the crop which
fully Justified the claim. Another was a picture of twin ears
of corn, and to show that this was no exaggeration, a
dozen stalks were displayed on the screen, each bearing
three or four perfect ears. The same arrangement was
carried out in the case of pictures and specimens of
potatoes, carrots, turnips, mangolds, onions and other arti-
cles of farm produce.
The centre of the stall was occupied by the beautiful
case contributed by the Massachusetts State Boanl of
Agriculture, and containing a tree infested by the gypsy
moth and bearing on its branches life-like specimens of the
birds which have been found to feed on the larvse in
their different stages of growth. This case attracted much
admiration and curiosity, which to some extent I was en-
abled to gratify by the distribution of two lai^e editions
of the Report of the State Board of Agriculture on the
work of exterminating the gypsy moth.
In the northeast section was erected a tall screen, six-
teen feet long and ten feet high, on one side of which
were displayed fine samples of com, wheat, rye, barley,
oats, buckwheat, Japanese and other millets. Brown corn,
and a variety of cultivated and wild clovers and grasses.
The other side was fitted with shelves, three of which
were occupied by a display of a hundred specimens of
66 KBPOBT OF BOARD OP
grains, beans and grass and other seeds, in half-gallon
jars. The fourth or upper shelf supported a fine collec-
tion of feed-stuffs and fertilizing materials in handsome
glass jars, contributed by the Massachusetts State Experi-
ment Station. A row of thirty long, slim vials, each con-
taining a specimen of some grass or forage plant, was
secured around the base of the screen. This also was con-
tributed by Dr. Goessmann, director of the Massachusetts
Experiment Station. The panel above the shelves was de-
voted to a display of Indian corn, showing stalks bearing
two, three and four ears, and also ears of field, sweet
and pop com arranged to show the numerous and striking
varieties of this cereal to be found within the limits of a
single State.
The remaining or northwest section was devoted to the
display of potatoes, turnips, beets, carrots, parsnips, onions,
squashes, pumpkins, cranberries, maple sugar and syrups,
including also the thirteen boxes each containing a section of
soil three feet deep taken from different places in the State.
The symmetry of the exhibit was somewhat interfered with
by the six large columns of the building; but these were
covered and made as ornamental as possible with specimens
of grasses, millet, etc. The posts at the main entrance were
also ornamented with a variety of herbage plants, and each
was crowned with a basket filled with superior varieties of
Indian com, and surrounded by other varieties, handsomely
traced, and substantially covering the baskets.
By favor of Mr. Sessions, I was furnished with statistics
showing that Massachusetts ranks among the first ten States
in both yield and value per acre of all the staple crops, ex-
cept cotton and hay, and even in hay she ranks first in value
per acre. These statistics I embodied in a little pamphlet
(copy herewith), which was warmly praised and thankfully
received by thousands of Massachusetts people and others.
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGEHS. 67
who expressed their cordial approbation of these efforts to do
justice to the capacity and resources of the Old Bay State.
While candidly acknowledging the general excellence of
MassachusettB men and women and institutions, it seemed
very much the fashion among our Western relatives to refer
to Massachusetts and the other New England States as a
sterile region, well adapted to foster the qualities of energy
and ingenuity, a good place to be born in and to emigrate
from, but in no way comparable for agricultural purposes
with the broad, level and fertile lands of the Middle and
Western States. In the Massachusetts exhibit of farm crops
I have tried to give expression and confirmation of my own
belief that Massachusetts can and does produce all the fruits
of a temperate clime in as great perfection and abundance
as any State in the Union, and while she does not claim
that her soil will yield profitable returns under niggardly and
slipshod management, her intelligent, liberal and skilful
farmers, being surrounded by industrious and thrifty com-
munities of manufacturers and merchants and scholars and
professional men, obtain better pay for their labor than their
Western brethren, whose profits are heavily tolled by the
freight agent and the middleman
The exhibit of the Agricultural College was very impor-
tant and interesting. The forestry exhibit of Massachusetts
was prepared under the direction of Prof. S. I. Maynard,
and consists of forty-seven sections of trees native to the
State, and cut, polished and finished so as to show the grain,
colors and characteristics of the different varieties. The
buildings and equipment of the college were represented by
a collection of twenty-four photographs and maps. Some of
these photographs represent the interiors of the buildings
and are exceptionally fine. There are large maps of the
college grounds showing the precise location of every note-
worthy object. The Agricultural Department is represented
68 RKPOBT OF BOABD OP
by a collection of samples of soils taken from different parts
of the State, accompanied by the results of their chemical
and mechanical analysis. The Veterinary Department sends
its elastic model of a horse. The Horticultural Department
consists of a glass case containing plaster-of-paris models of
our common fruits and vegetables. These models are nicely
painted and appear very life-like. In the same case are
shown specimens of the wild and crude fruit, and also of the
fruit in numerous stages of gradual development, as well as
fine specimens of the leading varieties of to-day. There is
a wooden model of President Clark's famous squash and the
harness in which it lifted enormous weights. There are fif-
teen photographs of the college organizations, including the
fraternities, the editorial boards of ''Aggie Life" and the
'' Index," the glee club, fire brigade, military companies,
band, orchestra and the athletic teams of 1892. The Hatch
Experiment Station also contributed magnificent specimens of
corn of several varieties, and a most valuable and interest-
ing collection of Japanese millets, and beans brought from
Japan by Prof. W. P. Brooks, the agriculturist of the station.
I have the honor to remain,
Very respectfully, your obedient servant,
John C. Dillon.
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGBBS. 69
EDUCATION.
The first step taken by the Board toward, the colleo-
tion of an exhibit which should worthily represent the
educational features of the State was the calling of a
meeting at their offices in the Sears Building, to which
were invited the State Board of Education, the State
agents and the superintendents of public schools through-
out the Commonwealth. This meeting, presided over
by Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer, awakened a great deal
of interest and resulted in the appointment by the Board
of a committee of seven from among those who had been
invited to be present, which committee was to have the
superintendence of the exhibit under the supervision of
the Board of World's Fair Managers. To this committee,
consisting of Mr. Edwin P. Seaver, chairman, of Boston ;
Mr. Samuel T. Dutton, secretary, of Brookline; Mr.
George E. Gay, Maiden; Mr. Thomas M. BaUiet,
Springfield; Mr. Clarence E. Meleny, Somerville; Mr.
William A. Mowry, Salem, and the Secretary of the
State Board of Education, too great credit cannot be
given for the industry, intelligence and interest shown
in collecting the exhibit which finally went to Chicago
as the representation of the Commonwealth in this all-
important department.
This committee held weekly meetings at the office of
the Board of Managers, a representative of which was
70 BBPORT OF BOARD OF
in almost every instance present to join in their delib-
erations.
The Board takes pleasure at this time in placing on
record its ^ thanks for the hearty co-operation which it
at all times received from this committee, and in ac-
knowledging the very great assistance which their indi-
vidual labors brought to the Board.
After this committee had mapped out their general
plan looking to the collecting of the exhibit and its
installation, the Board of World's Fair Managers, at the
suggestion of the committee, appointed ]Mr. George E.
Gay of Maiden as their agent to have charge of the col-
lecting of the exhibit and to have superintendence of
it during the continuance of the Exposition. To this
work Mr, Gay brought a degree of industry and con-
tinued application such as is rarely seen, and to him
should be given a full measure of praise for the excel-
lent work accomplished during the year that the manage-
ment of this exhibit was under his care.
The Board wish to call particular attention to two
maps of the State, one showing the distribution of
public schools within her borders, the other attesting
to the fact that ninety-seven per cent of the popula-
tion of the Commonwealth are happy in the possession
of the privileges which come from the existence of a free
public library in their midst. These two maps of enor-
mous size were evidence in compact form of the widespread
influence of education in the State of Massachusetts.
WORLD'S TAIB MANAQBRP-
71
■liiiHSII
iiiliiilili
m
i! nii
72 REPORT OF BOARD OP
It is, perhaps, needless for the Board to call attention
in detail to this exhibit, inasmuch as two very fiill reports
of Mr. Gray are hereto annexed. Its members cannot,
however, refrain from saying that there was perhaps
no State exhibit in the department of education which
was more highly commended and called forth more
praise than did that of Massachusetts. The medals
and awards made by the Bureau having supervision of
such matters testify to the good opinion in which Mas-
sachusetts and her works were held in the minds of
the committee which passed upon the exhibit of the
Commonwealth.
The exhibit was the most complete and comprehensive
which the Commonwealth has ever made, and reflected
great credit upon it as well as upon its general educa-
tional system. In the same department, although, prop-
erly speaking, not State exhibits, were to be found
those of the universities, colleges and technical schools
of the State, and it is a pleasure for the Board of
World's Fair Managers to be able to say that practically
each one of these institutions of learning took advantage
of the opportunity thus offered to place itself on ex-
hibition. The presidents of these several institutions
were invited by the Board of Managers to meet with
them in their office to discuss the general question of
an exhibit, and also to consider the question of distri-
bution of space which had been assigned to the Com-
monwealth for exhibits of her institutions of higher
WOELD'S PAIB MANAGERS.
73
74 BBPOBT OP BOARD OF
learning. This conference also served to awaken an
interest among those present, as is perhaps evidenced by
the statement that, with the exception of the Catholic
colleges, which finally made their exhibits in the space
allotted to the Catholic Church for its educational ex-
hibit, and of one or two other institutions in the Com-
monwealth, each one of the many accepted the space
allotted to it. The four colleges devoted to the in-
struction of women, — namely, Wellesley, Smith, Mount
Holyoke, and that which is now called RadcliSe College,
— were brought together in an alcove on one side of
the main aisle running through the space allotted to
Massachusetts for her educational exhibit, while directly
opposite were to be. seen the exhibits of Amherst, Tufts
and Williams Colleges and Clark University. To Har-
vard University was assigned one-half of the space
allotted to the Commonwealth for her exhibit in ttus
department. Those who visited her exhibit had no
doubt remaining in their minds that this distribution
of space was proper, and that it was utilized to the
best advantage by the officers of that corporation. It
was, without doubt, the finest and most instructive
exhibit ever made by any university in any interna-
tional exposition.
Next to this and on either side of an aisle were the
two courts allotted to and occupied by the Institute of
Technology, within which was installed an exhibit which
in a graphic manner laid before the visitor the courses
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 75
of study and the method of instruction in use in that
institution.
In the Bureau of Education was the exhibit of the
Catholic Church. The contributions from the Common-
wealth to this collection were in no way under the
jurisdiction of the Massachusetts Board of World's Fair
Managers, who have had no connection either with the
collecting or installing of such exhibits, nor any official
information concerning them. As the schools, semi-
' naries and colleges, however, within the State con-
tributed to this unified exhibit of Catholic education,
the Managers are glad to testify to the care, industry
and intelligence with which this great exhibit was
brought together. It was certainly deserving of the
universal praise that it received, and the Managers are
glad to believe that the awards which were granted to
Catholic institutions within the State were well merited
and worthily bestowed.
Two interesting features of the educational exhibit of
Massachusetts were the contributions of two colleges
located in foreign countries, — one in St. Sebastian,
Spain, and the other in Constantinople, Turkey, — both
being schools for the education of girls, and both being
supported largely through the liberality of Massachu-
setts citizens.
In concluding this report having reference to the edu-
cational exhibit of Massachusetts, it may be safely said
that it was well worth all the money expended upon
76 REPORT OP BOARD OF
it and reflected great credit upon her schools and her
colleges, once again emphasizing the great attention
which in Massachusetts has always been and is still
being given to education.
PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
To the MassachuseUs Board of WorUTs Fair Managers : —
Dear Sirs: — I have the honor to sabmit herewith my
report as Superintendent of the Massachasetts Public School
Exhibit at the World's Columbian Exposition.
PRE PA RAT/ON OF THE EXHIBIT,
The woi^ of preparation for the Exposition was begun
under your direction through the committee appointed by
your Board.
This committee issued circulars to school committees, super-
intendents of schools and teachers, giving information con-
cerning the display and making suggestions as to the character
of the work desired and directions for its preparation and
shipment.
I entered upon my work as Superintendent Dec. 26, 1893,
and began at once to ascertain what cities and towns were
intending to make displays of school work. I found the
number smaller than I had anticipated and took steps to
secure the interest of other places.
The material for the exhibit was sent to Boston at the
expense of the cities and towns contributing, and was stored
until it was shipped to Chicago. Most of this material was
ready for exhibition. The written work of pupils was in
bound volumes, portfolios and showcases. Manual training
work was mounted upon boards of uniform size ready to hang
upon the walls. Apparatus, natural history specimens, geo-
?
M-
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 77
graphical illustrations, etc., were received in a form suitable
for examination. Most of the drawing was sent unmounted.
I am under great obligations to Mr. Henry T. Bailey and
Mr. L. W. Sargent for assistance in mounting and preparing
the exhibits in drawing, and to the school committee of
Boston for the use of a room in the basement of the Latin
School, where the final arrangements for shipping were made.
The work received for exhibition came from the Board of
Education, from all the State normal schools, and from forty-
eight cities and towns of the State.
Great delay on the part of the Exposition officers in deter-
mining how much space was to be allowed the State for her
education exhibit destroyed the enthusiasm with which the
first announcement of the Exposition authorities had been
met, and the amount of material received was considerably
less than might easily have been displayed.
INSTALLATION OF THE EXHIBIT.
The material for the exhibit reached Chicago on April
15, and was installed and ready for examination on May 1.
The form of its installation gave rise to many questions.
The original plan of the chief of the Department of Lib-
eral Arts contemplated an arrangement by States in grades
on the following general plan : —
The educational exhibit will be organized both by States and
by grades. Each State will occupy a definite area which will
be assigned with reference to the elements which the several
States will have to represent as nearly as that can be ascer-
tained. These areas will be side by side in parallel subdivisions
extending north and south. The arrangement of the elements
in the several States will be expected to conform to a general
plan presenting the several grades in consecutive arrangements
extending east and west The studious observer may follow
78
BEPORT OP BOABD OP
the grades from the most elementaiy to the most advanced in
any State, or crossing the areas he may trace the similarities
or variations in any chosen grade.
In the presentation of piiblio school systems the several States
and Territories will be the smallest units for which separate
provision can be made by the chief of the department Cities,
villages and rural schools will find such recognition and repre-
sentation as can be allowed within the limits assigned to the
States which include them.
The following sketch illustrates this plan: —
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MASSACHUSEira
CONNECTICUT.
RHODE ISLAND.
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VERMONT
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MAINE.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
It was finally and most unfortunately found impossible
to carry this plan into execution, and the various States
were assigned places in the south gallery of the Manu-
WOBT^D'S FAIB MANAGERS.
79
factures and Liberal Arts Building, and the cross aisles
separating grades were abandoned. In several States the
arrangement by grades was abandoned and other methods
of classification adopted. Some States adopted a classifica-
tiop by cities and counties ; others arranged their work
by subjects. Some States combined one or both of these
methods with classification by grades; some separated the
work of graded schools from the work of ungraded schools,
and some had little classification that was apparent.
The plan of arrangement which was used for the Massa-
chusetts display is shown below. This arrangement proved
to be most satisfactory to those who wished to study the
exhibit with a view to ascertaining the character of Massa-
chusetts school work and learning the lesson which it taught.
It was not so acceptable to those who wished to compare
the entire work of one city with the work of other cities,
or to those who wished to see the work of one city only.
PLAN OF MASSACHUSETTS PUBLIC SCHOOL EXHIBIT.
MA88ACHU8ETT8
G
PUBLIC 8CHOOL8.
J>
Normal School
of Oymnastica.
Boflton Evening
Drawing.
BoatoD Bvening
Drawing.
It will be seen that the exhibit was divided into six de-
partments, as fqllows: Kindergarten department, primary
80 KBPORT OF BOABD OF
department, grammar school department, high school depart-
ment and the department devoted to the Board of Educa-
tion. The walls separating the departments were ten and
one-half feet high, and were used to display drawing, manual
training products, photographs and sample pages of the
written work of the pupils. The casts in the centre of the
main aisle were from the Normal Art School.
The kindergarten department contained kindergarten gifts
and materials, with tables and chairs kindly loaned by Milton
Bradley & Co. The walls were covered with pupils' kinder-
garten exercises, and portfolios contained the overflow. In
the primary room, the wall display included the State pri-
mary course in drawing, with other drawing, and Superin-
tendent Davis' presentation of his method of teaching primary
reading. Portfolios contained additional work in drawing.
In showcases only was clay work to be found, while bound
volumes held pupils' work in number, form, color, language
and nature study, with pictures of teachers and pupils engaged
in their work.
The arrangement of the grammar school room was similar
to that of the primary room. Drawing, methodically ar-
ranged, covered the walls ; bookcases were filled with bound
volumes of pupils' work; showcases contained a great
variety of materials used by teachers for purposes of instruc-
tion, or made by pupils in the course of school work. One
alcove of the grammar school department was devoted to
manual training and sewing. A portion of the sewing was
crowded out of this room by lack of space, but was shown
in . the high school department. Another alcove of the
grammar school depaitment was devotpd to drawing and
photographs.
The high school department contained the work of high
schools, while the normal school department displayed
that of normal schools, together witli photographs, plans of
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGBB8. 81
school baildings, drawing and sample pages from bound
volames.
The department of the Board of Education contained the
work sent by the Board, pamphlets for distribution, albums
of photographs and the choicest bound volumes. This room
was used as the office of the Superintendent. The outer
walls of several departments contained work from the even-
ing drawing schools of Boston, Worcester and Waltham.
CHARACTER OF THE EXHIBIT.
The school exhibit of the State of Massachusetts was
complete in ihe sense that it exhibited work of every
kind done in the public and normal schools of the State,
from the rude attempts of the little children in the kin-
dergarten to the fine display of the Normal Art School.
From the first beginning of scholastic education in the
primary grades to the work of pupils just taking their
college examinations, every phase of school life was shown.
The exhibit was incomplete in the sense that it did not
represent the work of the entire State. Of the two hun-
dred and fifty-two cities and towns, only forty sent work
which gave a picture of the school system in operation,
and many of these exhibits showed only partially the work
that is done. This condition is offset, however, by the fact
that cities and towns of every size and schools of every
grade and character were shown, so that while the picture
is not complete, it is true and satisfactory.
The contribution from the Board of Education gave a
good view of the work which this body does, and the
character of the school system of the State of Massachu-
setts, the distinctive feature of which is the control of
the public schools by local committees. So far as re-
lates to the choice of teachers, methods of teaching and
82 REPORT OF BOARD OP
coarses of study, the local committees are supreme^ and
from this fact arises the greatest possible diversity in
subjects of study and methods of teaching. The system
has its advantages, which are apparent wherever it is
contrasted with that of States having a course of study
under a strong central authority. Committees and teachers
are continually making experiments to lead to no good
result. Pupils moving from one city or town to another
are placed at great disadvantage because of the different
studies pursued in different places. On the other hand,
the advantages of the system are seen in the wonderful
activity of teachers and school officials, in the multitude
of original investigations which are made in every portion
of the State, in the emulation which exists between differ-
ent communities, and in the constant effort to secure for
the local organization all Hiat is best in modem appli-
ances and modern methods.
The exhibit of the Board included a complete series of
its annual reports from 1838 to 1892. These reports are
much more than tabulated statements of attendance and
expenditures and records of the extension of the public
school system. They form a history of education in this
country, so far as progress has been made in subjects of
study and methods of instruction. The great questions of
organization and discipline, of the means and ends of pub-
lic school education, are here discussed by the foremost
thinkers of the State, and no other educational documents
in the country are of greater interest and of greater his-
torical value.
A series of maps gives the location of training schools
and classes maintained by the various cities and towns
throughout the State to supplement the normal school in-
struction, the places at which teachers' institutes have been
held during three successive years, expenses incurred by
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 83
the various cities and towns in the transportation of pupils
to and from school, and the location of cities and towns
which have local superintendence. Incidentally, the last
map exhibits the extent to which the system of local
superintendence has reached, and prophesies that within a
few years the entire teaching force of the State will be
under the direction of skilled local superintendents.
Statistics of attendance and expenditure, of the prepara-
tion of teachers for their work, of comparative wages, of
teachers of the different sexes and the absolute amount
paid, the attendance in evening schools, the increasing
expenditures for public schools, the average membership in
public schools, the average attendance in public schools,
important dates in the history of the public school system,
and the extent of supervision, text-books and supplies, the
conveyance of pupils to and from school, were shown in a
series of charts in a graphical and forcible manner.
Two large portfolios contained the administrative forms
used by the school committees and school superintendents
throughout the State, and formed a suggestive and helpful
exhibition of the fertility of the minds of school authorities,
and the care and time devoted to securing the best possible
execution of the laws and rules governing the schools of the
State. A large map showed, as well as a map can show,
the location of the common schools of the State. Its one
distinctive lesson was that every portion of the State is cov-
ered with school houses and that every child within its bor-
ders may receive at least the elements of a good education.
Another large map showed the location and the number of
free public libraries in the State. Its principal lesson was the
fact that ninety-seven per cent, of the population of the State
have access to a free public library within the limits of their
own municipality.
Pamphlets for public distribution gave a detailed account
84 BEPOBT OF BOARD OF
of the Massachusetts school system and its principal histori*
cal features. These included : Public statutes of the State
relating to public instruction, with annotations and explana-
tions ; an Historical Sketch of the Growth of the Massachu-
setts Public School System; a descriptive sketch of its
salient features; a descriptive sketch of Teachers' Training
Schools and Classes ; an account of the recent movement to
promote nature study in public schools ; an account of the
movement to provide free transportation for pupils when it is
advisable to discontinue rural schools ; an historical account
of instruction in drawing and music in the public schools of
the State; a report of the Free Public Library Commission
of the State ; copies of the course of study recommended for
use in the common schools of the State; and an historical
account of the normal schools.
Closely connected with the exhibit of the Board of Educa-
tion was the exhibit of the State normal schools. This exhibit
showed by the use of photographs the means of instruction
provided in the five normal schools of the State. By speci-
mens of the pupils' work it showed the character of the work
secured, and by charts and other methods it showed the
courses of study pursued and the methods of instruction
adopted. The normal schools of Massachusetts are organized
upon the following plan: The work of the schools is two-
fold,— first, purely professional instruction, namely, instruc-
tion in educational psychology, in the principles of education,
and in the best methods of instruction and their historical
development; second, the presentation and study of various
branches of human learning with a view to ascertaining the
best methods of teaching these branches — that is, varioos
branches of study pursued in the public schools are reviewed
and studied in the normal schools, but always with the pur-
pose of ascertaining the best method of presenting these
studies to pupils, the normal pupils thereby acquiring a fresh
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGBRS. 85
knowledge of the Bubjects investigatedy together with a knowl-
edge of good methods of teaching the branches. All bat
one of these schools provide opportunities for pupils to put
into practice to some extent the principles and methods which
they learn in their studies, the practice school forming an im-
portant and essential portion of the normal school.
Of the various cities and towns contributing to the exhibit,
Boston was by far the most prominent. It showed work of
every character done in the public schools of the city, over
a hundred different subjects in all being illustrated, and gave
work from every school room and laboratory in the city.
Portfolios, books and walls were devoted to this display.
Photographs alone occupied twenty-five large albums and gave
a truthful representation of the means of instruction afforded
by that city. All the usual subjects of instruction were illus-
trated fully, and so related to the course of study and ac-
complished by such full explanations of the methods of
instruction and the conditions under which the work of the
pupils was done that one was able to study the exhibit with
ease and satisfaction. The display in drawing covered the
entire field from Mrs. Cutler's course in primary form and
color work to the elaborate work of the evening drawing
schools, and was the most complete and excellent of its kind
in the public school exhibits of the country. The illustra-
tions in the volume of pupils' work were full and excellent in
books devoted to scientific studies, especially in the high
school department, but the ordinary work of the grammar
and primary grades did not contain the same amount of
illustration that appeared in the work of some of the other
cities of the State. The exhibit in the various departments
of manual training in Boston was very full and was excellent
in every particular. Photographs showed clearly the conditions
under which this work was done and the illustrative work of
pupils showed the courses of study and the character of the
86 KBPORT OF BOABD OF
work secured from pupils. In sewing, the entire course of
study was shown by numerous examples of pupils' work in
several large albums, and a number of show-cases contained
completed garments. Photographs showed the pupils at work,
with entire classes dressed in clothing which they had made
with their own hands. The work in sewing was developed
in general along sloyd principles; that is, every process
taught is applied at once in the making of some completed
article.
In woodwork, we had the three systems now in use in
the Boston grammar schools, the so-called Eliot School
course, as arranged by Mr. Leavitt; the course in sloyd,
as arranged by Mr. Larsson, and the course arranged by
Mr. Eddy. The work in each of these three exhibits
showed most careful thought and experiment on the part
of their promoters, and the fact that the three courses
are in use side by side indicates the determination of the
city to solve by long-continued experiment the problem
of the best form of manual training for common schools.
What the outcome will be is uncertain. It seems to me,
however, that the cpurse of Mr. Larsson, either in its
present or in some modified form, is likely to become
the standard system of the country for grammar schools.
Whether the principles of sloyd can wisely be carried to
schools of higher grade is an open question, as is also
the general question of what models to employ and in
what order to introduce them.
Some of the special exhibits of Boston may be described
briefly as follows: Work in kindergarten was characterized
by the delicacy of color employed in the materials used
by the children and the wonderful perfection of the chil-
dren's work. Clay modelling was of a high degree of ex-
cellence. The work in the English language, from the
lowest primary to the last year in the high school, was of
WORLD'S FAm MANAGSBS. 87
exceptional interest and importance. The exhibit showed
that Boston's reputation for good work in this subject Is
well founded, and the prefaces of the teachers explaining
their methods of teachiug the subjects form an educational
treatise of remarkable value.
The character of the penmanship in this exhibit was simi-
lar to that of most cities. The form of letters used as
copies was that of the well-known Spencerian style. There
was an absence of shading and the effect in the best
specimens was pleasant to the eye and the work was legible
when the ink was of good quality. On the other hand, it
was evidently written with great painstaking and very slowly,
and the problem of beautiful, legible, rapid writing seems
not to have been solved in all schools.
The distinguishing characteristic of the Boston drawing
was the large number of original designs. The divisions of
elementary drawing which have now become common,—-
namely, mechanical, decorative and illustrative, — seems not
to be carried on in unison throughout the entire grammar
school course. One of the results of this Exposition will be
to secure, on the part of teachers of drawing in all parts
of the country, greater attention to pictorial drawing. This
should not be used to the exclusion of design and geometri-
cal drawing; the three should go hand in hand.
A relief map of North America made from a newspaper
which had been soaked in warm water was the best relief
map in the exhibit. The work in relief maps in the pub-
lic schools should be confined to rather narrow limits and
should be made in all cases as correct as possible in ele-
vation and boundaries. In the production of these maps
contour maps should be used as far as possible and the
method adopted by professional makers of relief maps is
probably the best. One large, accurate, beautiful map,
in the making of which all the pupils in* the room had
88 BEPOBT OP BOARD OP
a part, will prove of much greater valae than many
patches in putty and pulp. A good relief map of the
State of Massachusetts should be placed in every school
room. Wherever possible, pupils in the room should make
the map from the contour maps published by the 'govern-
ment. Where this is impracticable, the city or the State
should furnish a good map of this character. From this
may be taught, better than from any other source, a host
of facts pertaining to the drainage of the State, the char-
acter of its productions, the varieties of its climate and
the historical development of its manufactures and com-
merce.
The exhibit of the normal school of Boston showed very
fully the character of the work done in this institution. The
school has an honorable history and it has had great influ-
ence in maintaining and improving the character of instruc-
tion in the schools of the city.
From the Girls' High School came a volume of rare value,
a description of the art collections of this «chool and a cata-
logue of its libraries.
The Horace Mann School for the Deaf sent papers in geog-
raphy, history, arithmetic, physiology and English that would
do credit to pupils whose senses are normal, with sloyd work
of a very high degree of excellence.
The views of the Mechanic Arts High School, opened this
fall in Boston, showed the accommodations which Boston has
prepared for a manual training high school. A remarkable
fact connected with this high school is the number of pupils
who have applied for admission at its opening session. Nearly
as many pupils have applied for admission to its lowest class
as the entire building is capable of acconmiodating. The
result is that the city has at once made preparations for
building an additional school of the same character.
A distinctively Boston institution is the military organiza-
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 89
tion maintained by its high schools. The boys of the various
high schools form one regiment, commanded by officers selected
from their number. Each of the schools is organized as a
battalion, with several companies, varying according to the
number of students. This military organization has been
maintained for a long time and is popular with the pupils
and with the community. The instruction in military science
is in the hands of a special director, who devotes his entire
time to the work.
The five school papers published by five of the Boston high
schools formed an interesting portion of the Boston exhibit.
These papers are published and edited by the pupils of the
various schools and reflect credit upon their managers.
Next in importance to the exhibit from Boston stood the
exhibit of the city of Springfield. This exhibit did not aim
to give a complete picture of the school work of the city.
It rather aimed to show the lines of work to which the school
authorities have given special attention in recent years. In
general these subjects are arithmetic, drawing, manual train-
ing, music and writing. The work in primary arithmetic was
unique in various particulars. Perhaps it may be best char-
acterized by saying that it is based upon form study and
elementary geometry. It is closely co-ordinated with drawing
and with English. According to this plan mensuration begins
in the lowest grades and is continued through the entire course.
The area of surfaces and the contents of solids are discussed
and measured in grades several years lower than is the custom
in other cities. All the work in arithmetic was very fully and
carefully illustrated, and no portion of the Massachusetts ex-
hibit was more carefully studied than this. It gave evidence
of most careful thought and experiment, and some of the
results exhibited were surprising.
Drawing was shown by two collections of charts giving an
epitome of the course, and by large portfolios giving many
90 REPORT OF BOARD OF
examples taken from the work of pupils in primary and
grammar grades. These were systematically arranged and
afforded an excellent opportunity to study the oourse as out-
lined by the director of drawing. No more systematic work
was shown in the exhibit. A special feature of the work was
the excellence of its object, drawing. Another important
feature was its correlation with the work in the high school.
For example, an important portion of the high school drawing
consists in illustrating the work done in biology, physics and
chemistry. The drawing of the lower grades looks forward
to this work and prepares for it. The high school drawing
was shown only in its application to science work, but these
applications had a very high degree of merit. A feature
of this work which has attracted very marked attention was
the color work in botany and zoology. This work was done in
water colors and was of such excellence that it could well be
used as charts for instruction in those branches in the lower
grades of schools.
Springfield furnished the only elaborate exhibit in music in
the Massachusetts department. This exhibit consisted of the
.written exercises of pupils. These exercises contained music
written by the pupils from dictation, written examinations in
music, and music written to express what the pupils have heard
sung or played. The teacher sings or plays in the presence
of the pupils and they write the music which they hear. This
exhibit received much attention.
The work in manual training included work for every
grade from the kindergarten to the last year of the high
school. It consisted of work in paper, clay, wood and iron,
and the scheme was so arranged as to form a connected
whole. The paper modelling and the clay modelling are
closely connected with instruction in drawing. The work in
paper folding and other kindei^arten exercises is followed
by simple wood carving and other forms of knife work, and
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 91
that leads to Mr. Eilbon's well-known course of manual
training in wood and iron. This work was shown in large
frames by carefully numbered models and the proper ex-
planatory legends. Mr. Kilbon's course, as is well known,
is not the usual Russian form of. manual training. It is,
however, remarkably systematic, and the results secured under
his efficient instruction are such as to commend his system.
The work in penmanship from the Springfield public
schools was more extensive than any other similar exhibit
from the State. The form of letters is the usual Spencerian
form, and shading is taught from the first. Instruction in
form is combined with a great variety of movement exer-
cises. These exercises were an important portion of the
work and a very striking feature of the exhibit. The re-
sults secured show a style of handwriting which is not dif-
ferent in character from that taught in business schools.
The selected specimens of high school pupils' work showed a
degree of facility in pen work that was unexcelled in any
exhibit in the building, save in the exhibit of commercial
schools.
The high school exhibit was confined principally to work in
science. The work in this line was of a very high character.
The exhibit from the Springfield training school showed the
course of study and methods of training employed in this
school. Its efi^ciency is due in a great degree to the skill
and devotion of its principal. Miss Read, and the volume was
a satisfactory exhibition of its work.
Adams sent seven bound volumes of pupils' work, two
from the gi*ammar schools and five from the high school.
The general character of this work was good and reflected
credit upon the superintendent and teachers. A pamphlet
gave the organization and rules of the training school.
Braintree showed work of all grades in four bound volumes.
The volumes had evidently been prepared with a good deal
92 BBPORT OF BOABD OF
of care. The general impression which one received from
them was that the work in the lower grades has not reached
the degree of excellence common in the upper grades.
Brockton made a small exhibit, showing only drawing and
arithmetic. The drawings were good and the work in arith-
metic was of such a character as to make one wish the exhibit
were larger.
Brookline furnished an accurate picture of the work done
in her public schools. The conditions for school work there
are remarkably favorable. The town is so wealthy that it
can devote to its public schools a large sum of money with-
out taxing itself to the same extent that other communities
must do to secure a meagre sum for schools. As a result,
a great amount of money has been spent during the last
decade in the building and furnishing of school houses and
in securing the best available superintendent and teachers.
The first characteristic which struck one in examining the
Brookline work is its comprehensiveness. A list of subjects
taught to pupils of common school age includes all the or-
dinary common school branches, and drawing, English litera-
ture, zoology, botany, domestic economy, sewing, work in
wood and iron, mineralogy, physics and chemistry.
The appliances for teaching these subjects were complete in
every particular. Workshops, kitchens and sewing rooms
are provided freely, and no effort is spared to make the
work of school life a complete epitome of all that a child
should learn, as well as a means of training mind and body
to a high degree of power. The work shown illustrated all
the features of this very comprehensive system. Photograpiis
gave pictures of school houses, school rooms and school
appliances. Notable among the last were the art treasures
contributed by Mr. William H. Lincoln, for many years a
most efficient member of the school committee. The written
work of pupils covered nearly all the subjects contained in
WOELD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 93
the course of study. Some of the work which received the
most attention was the work in domestic economy, in the
natural sciences and in sewing. It is unusual to read in the
ordinary school work of grammar school children how to dust
a room, how to sweep a floor and how to wash a sink, but
who shall say that these are not as important information as
how many cities there are upon the Erie Canal or how long
the River Lena is? A remarkable book was devoted to sew-
ing. Here the pupil writes clearly a description of what she
proposes to do, illustrates her composition with an appropri-
ate drawing, and then does the work which she has described.
This work was attached to the composition and this threefold
representation was exhibited as a unit.
Brookline is one of the few places In Massachusetts which
furnish free public kindergartens, and the work of its kinder-
gartens was shown in frames, upon the wall and in a portfolio.
The work consisted of the usual work of kindergartens, paper
folding, weaving, etc., and a few special exercises designed
for wall decoration on special days. There were also shown
several cases of collections of natural objects made by pupils
and teachers, and designed to illustrate the work in geogi*a-
phy and natural history. These cases gave rise to the sug-
gestion that printers' cases are well adapted to collections of
this character.
Chelsea showed drawing and work in English for primary
and grammar schools, with high school work in nearly all
branches taught in New England high schools. The work in
English was distinguished by several peculiarities. The most
prominent of these appeared in the exhibition of Mr. Davis'
method of teaching reading, known as the '^ thought method."
By a series of photographs of classes, and printed explana-
tions beneath them, he showed very satisfactorily its principal
characteristics. Some of the prominent features of this system
are : first, the thought always precedes the expression ; second.
94 REPORT OF BOARD OF
all reading from printed text-books is sight reading; third,
in oral reading the pupil looks at his teacher and not at his
book, and the exercises resemble a conversation lesson more
than an ordinary reading lesson. This exhibit attracted a
good deal of attention on the part of educators from all
parts of the United States and from foreign countries.
A characteristic of the grammar school exhibit in English
was the large amount of memorized gems of English literature.
This feature is a pleasant one for the pupQs, and its results
must be beneficial on their vocabulary and forms of expres*
sion.
The course in drawing was shown in full, and conformed in
general to the outlines of the State course. The work shown
was good.
A distinguishing feature of the work from the high school
was the written translations of Greek and Latin read in school.
Every pupil, it seems, is required as a part of his work to
make complete written translation of all the Greek and Latin
which he reads.
Concord furnished an album of photographs giving pictures
of its school houses, school rooms and school appliances.
Its most striking feature was in its representation of the
teams by which pupils are conveyed from rural districts to
the central schools, the system of centralization of pupils
being characteristic of the school system in this town.
Everett, in eleven bound volumes, sent samples of its
school work in all subjects and grades. The character of
this work was uniformly good and some of it was excellent.
There was evidence of faithful and wise superintendence and
a general advance along all lines of school work.
Fairhaven, in two bound volumes, sent school work of
all grades. The work was interesting and suggestive of good
methods of instruction. Fairhaven also sent copies of its
school report for distribution, and these were taken away
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 95
by visitors to the exhibit as representative of a good Massa-
chasetts town school report.
Fall River sent, in large, well-bound volumes, samples
of its work in drawing, English and arithmetic; and, in
frames, models to illustrate the course in manual training
in the B. M. C. Durfee High School. It also furnished
photographs of its school buildings and classes. The work
was uniformly good. The photographs of the B. M. C. Durfee
High School gave a good idea of the school building, and
suggested the character of the work done within its walls.
A printed volume gave a history and description of this
building.
Hingham, in fourteen bound volumes, made a good dis-
play of the work done in all of its schools. The most
characteristic feature of her exhibit is the attention which
it gives to science work, and particularly to nature study
in the lower grades. The amount and character of the
work shown in this branch indicated great enthusiasm on
the part of the superintendent and teachers. The high
school work was good and suggestive of excellent methods.
Holyoke made no general display of its school work, but
exhibited some of its features in a highly attractive way. The
drawing was excellent, particularly the model and object draw-
ing and historic ornament from pupils of the high school.
Its work in penmanship was excellent in character and showed
the most training in this branch of study. A volume of man-
uscript written and illustrated by pupils in the public schools
was a work of great excellence and attracted much attention.
Holyoke furnished a number of relief maps made from putty
and pulp. These were painted to represent elevation and
were suggestive of possibilities in this kind of work which are
not often secured. A volume gave a record of the history
and course of study of the normal training school of the city.
This school is considered by many observers to be one of
96 REPORT OF BOARD OP
the best of its kind in the State. A series of historical charts
prepared by the pupils of one of the grammar schools to illus-
trate lessons in history was unique in character and of value to
teachers who examined it.
Lawrence showed the character of its school work in nine
large bound volumes, covering all the branches of study taught
in its schools. This work was of good quality and the methods
illustrated were worthy of attention.
Maiden furnished two bound volumes of high school work
and a case of chemical products from the high school labora-
tory. The volume on physics gave the method of instruction
pursued in this study and sufficient pupils' work to indicate its
general character. The method of instruction is adapted to
the conditions under which it is given and the results were very
satisfactory. Some of the illustrative drawings were unusually
well executed. The work in chemistry likewise had great
excellence. Original laboratory note books, in the solution
of chemical problems and the determination of unknowns in
qualitative analysis, were of excellent character. The oi:gani-
zation and plan of work in the normal training school of this
city were also shown. The work of this school was laid out
in a manner worthy of study. A pamphlet by the superin-
tendent of schools showed the method of promotion employed
in this city, whereby rapid promotion of bright pupils is made
easy. This method is believed to be unique and veiy suc-
cessful in practice.
Pittsfield showed drawing of all grades and of excellent
character, a bound volume of language work in the gram-
mar grades, a case of construction work in clay and paper,
and a very elaborate and artistic herbarium of native flow-
ers. The method of mounting and the excellence of the
work attracted much attention.
Quincy showed drawing, construction work and the usual
studies of primary, grammar and high school. The work
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 97
of this city has been much sought after by visitors on ac-
count of the reputation of the so-called '' Quincy methods."
These methods have, however, been so much modified as
to differ essentially from the methods which took this title
under the direction of Colonel Parker. The methods now
used in this city do not in general differ from those used in
other cities of Massachusetts under the direction of skilful
superintendence. The work was excellent in every line, and
worthy of the study which it received. This was particularly
true in the nature study, which was exhibited very fully and
in some particulars more completely than that of any other
city. Tiie drawing of Quincy was also notable. It formed
a large part of the State course as illustrated upon the
walls of the Massachusetts exhibit, and tilled several port-
folios, besides occupying a large portion of one of the
winged frames. The work was carefully graded and well
executed.
Salem furnished us with thirty volumes of pupils' exer-
cises, elegantly bound in half calf. These volumes were in
general of two kinds: one kind containing annual examina-
tions ; the other illustrative lessons. The work of Salem
differed from that of most of the work shown in the Mas-
sachusetts exhibit in the fact that it showed the work of
entire classes alone, no selected work having been sent.
This, of course, detracted from the appearance of the volumes,
though it added to their interest. On the whole, they gave an
admirable picture of the work being done in a New Eng-
land city which has clung to old methods of instruction for
many years and which is gradually making progress on
modern lines under the direction of an energetic and philo-
sophic superintendent. A remarkable volume was entitled
" An Historic Album." This album consisted of a very large
number of photographs of objects of local and historical in-
terest. Salem abounds in these objects, and the pictures
98 REPORT OF BOARD OF
have therefore great interest and historical value. These
photographs were taken and finished by pupils in the Salem
High School. With each photograph was a descriptive
essay written by some pupil in the high school and copied
on the typewriter. These descriptions showed patient research
and a good degree of power in idiomatic and picturesque
English. On the whole, no other object in the Massachu-
setts Educational Exhibit had greater interest or historic
value than this remarkable volume. Another album gave
fine photographic views of the school buildings and schools
of Salem. A valuable feature of the Salem exhibit was the
framed pictures of rooms decorated under the direction of
Robs Turner, for the pui*pose of art instruction in the pub-
lic schools. The influence of Salem in this work will be
far reaching.
From Somerville came work in kindei^arten, color-drawing,
nature study, elementary science, language, geography and
sewing. Somerville is one of the few places in Massachu-
setts that support free public kindergartens, the others being
Boston, Cambridge, Lowell, Newton and Brookline. The
course in color was very elaborate and systematic, and the
drawing was excellent. The course of sewing was very care-
fully graded and arranged, and its method of exhibition could
hardly be improved. The processes taught and their appli-
cation in completed garments filled fifteen showcases and
formed a very attractive and instructive exhibit.
Waltham showed only drawing and manual training. The
drawing from the evening drawing schools and from the high
school was excellent. The manual training showed Mr.
Schwartz's course, so far as it was developed at the time of
the opening of the Exposition. This course is original with
Mr. Schwartz in many of its features. He follows sloyd prin-
ciples, but his models are somewhat different from those of
other teachers of manual training. Moreover, he carries the
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 99
sloyd principle into work for high school pupils, including
work in iron. His exhibit has received much attention, and
has great excellence.
From Westfield came high school work alone. One volume
was devoted to physics, another to business practice and book-
keeping, another to chemistry, botany and physiology, and
another to English. All the work in these volumes was char-
acterized by excellent penmanship and a general appearance
of care and neatness very creditable to the school. The work
in book-keeping and business practice gave a picture of the
commercial part of this school justly celebrated for its effi-
ciency. The work in physics and chemistry was laboratory
work of a high order. The work in English was carefully
arranged and graded. In addition to the bound volumes,
the school had sent several of its exercise books not prepared
for the Exposition, but showing very clearly that the work of
bound volumes was but a fair sample of its ordinary work.
Worcester devoted one bound volume to the work of its
primary schools, seven volumes to the work of its grammar
schools, and three volumes to the work of its classical high
school. The primary work was taken from the third grade only,
and showed the results of teaching the ordinary branches of
study in this grade. The volumes devoted to the grammar
school showed the results obtained in these schools. The
methods of teaching testified to a good degree of origi-
nality. The course of study has not been seriously affected
by modern notions, and knowledge and facility in its use
seem to be a primaiy purpose of school authorities. In fol-
lowing out this object they reach good results. One volume
from this city was unique and valuable. It consisted of pupils'
monthly record books. These monthly record books are an
attempt to adapt the French system to American conditions,
which seems to have been successful. The record books are
prepared, however, not for the inspector, as in France, but
102 BEPORT OP BOARD OP
and Pennsylvania, and will probably be followed by other
States.
Perhaps the greatest educational need of the State is a
school museam. Here shoald be maintained a pedagc^cal
library, a complete representation of the educational facilities
of the State, a complete exposition of courses of study and
methods of instruction, and a display of school architecture,
furnishings and apparatus. Our Chicago exhibit would make
a proper beginning for such a museum.
In conclusion, allow me to express my appreciation of the
unfailing interest which the Commissioners have shown in our
Educational Department, and my gratitude for the many per-
sonal courtesies which I have received at their hands.
Respectfully submitted,
(Signed) George E. Gat.
COLLEGES.
Board of WorlcPs Fair Managers^ CommonioeaUh of Massachusetts : —
Dear Sirs : — In compliance with your request, I have the
honor to submit herewith a brief report of the exhibits made
by the colleges of the Commonwealth at the World's Colum-
bian Exposition.
LOCATION AND ARRANGEMENT OF THE COLLEGE EXHIBITS.
The college exhibits occupied space in the educational
section of the Liberal Arts Department, in the south gallery
of the Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building, adjoining
the space assigned to the public schools of the Common*
wealth. This space was in the central portion of the section
and was designed to give to the exhibits as prominent a
position as possible, as was evidenced by the fact that the
allotment to Harvard University was ofttimes spoken of as
WOBLD'S TATR HANAOESS.
103
the *' place of honor." The following diagram gives a repre-
sentation of the relative positions of these exhibits: —
Habtard.
Habtabo.
Ambent.
Clark.
TnfU.
Williams.
Habyabd.
Habvabd.
CoIIegM for Girla
in Spain and
Turkey.
Haryard Annex.
Smith.
Wellealey.
Mount Holyoke.
Inttitata
of
Technology.
The amount of floor space assigned to the several institu-
tions was about as follows: —
Harvard University, 4,500 square feet; Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology, 1,100 square feet; Amherst College,
Tufts College, "Williams College and Clark University, 75
square feet each; and the colleges for women, 375 square
feet.
PURPOSE OF THE EXHIBITS.
The apparent purpose of all the colleges was to show as
fully as possible the educational facilities afforded by them
and to give to the investigator an opportunity to acquire all
desirable information concerning their equipment, courses of
study and methods of instruction. Some of the institutions,
with commendable pride, exhibited the fruits of their labors
in the lives and works of their graduates.,
HARVARD UNIVERSITY,
To Harvard University was assigned the largest space given
to any educational institute in the world. It was believed that
the oldest scholastic institution in the land given to the world
104 KKPORT OF BOAKD OF
by Columbus should have a prominent position in a celebnu
tion designed to show the progress of mankind for four
hundred yeara. The admirable manner in which she filled
this position was the theme of much enthusiastic comment
from all observers. In general, the method was to treat
each department of the University as a unit, and to give a
complete view of the condition and extent of its work. Pict-
ures, charts, maps, models, specimens, pamphlets, bound
volumes, — all did service in showing the resources and
characteristics of each department. To one entering the
exhibit from the south, the first portion to present itself
was the Department of Physics. On five large tables was
arranged the apparatus that has made the ^^ Harvard experi-
ments " in physics possible. The course, or rather the courses,
had several distinguishing features of excellence, not the least
of which was the low cost of the special apparatus. That
the course ends in practical applications was indicated by
photographs of the Jefferson Physical Laboratory, by explana-
tory pamphlets, and by working models of electrical ma-
chinery made by students in the Lawrence Scientific School.
On the left, as one entered from the south, was an al-
cove devoted to physical culture, the only complete exhibit
of its kind from any American college. Here were to be
seen the charts from which Dr. Sargent*s type models of
American college students were made, with large photo*
graphs of the models in various positions, samples of
special apparatus for scientific research, photographs in great
number illustrating different types of physical development,
sample charts for recording physical measurements, and
sample prescriptions for exercise in hygienic treatment.
The next room, used as a reception room, contained the
desk of the custodian, while upon a lai^e table was kept a
supply of various pamphlets for distribution. The walls of
this room were utilized for presenting many interesting feat-
WOKLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 105
nres of the work of the University. Upon the walls of the
end allotted to the Lawrence School were many exterior
and interior photographs of its building, showing the labora-
tory, reading room and class-room facilities, while adjoining
these were graphic charts answering all reasonable questions
as to the equipment, growth, finances, number of students,
graduates and the like. In the centre was an ample book-
case crowded with publications in uniform crimson binding,
legal works of the instructors. Above and on either side
were the still more impressive portraits of her distinguished
teachers, Story, Dane, Parker, Parsons, Greenleaf and
Washburn. At the opposite end of this same room was the
exhibit of the Divinity School, which included portraits of
her distinguished graduates grouped about photographs of
Divinity Hall and the Divinity School. Among these might
be mentioned Sparks, Channing, Clarke, Hedge, President
Hill and Samuel Longfellow. In the significant collections
of portraits, busts and publications that covered the walls
of this room were three exhibits of especial interest to Har-
vard College, — the first, a series of three charts drawn from
the Quinquennial Catalogue, showing the transmission of
education in families. Beneath the portrait of Sir Richard
Saltonstall was the record of eight generations of Harvard
graduates in the male line ; a picture of '^ The Reverend
Mr. John Lowell " presided over a like enviable record of
six generations; while the chart devoted to the Ware and
allied families showed the same heritage of academic loyalty.
Close at hand was a large case of historical publications
with numerous portraits on either side. Here, again, was
something of the same suggestion of venerable traditions in
the long list of these famous graduates of the college, who
in their day had been contributors to American historical
literature. Living writers, biographers, genealogists and the
like were excluded, the line extending from the two Mathers
106 BEPOBT OF BOARD OF
to the familiar names of Prescott, Motley, Bancroft and
Palfrey. Farther to the left was a still more familiar group
of portraits. Here were to be seen pictures of living men
grouped around the revered faces of Andrew Preston Pea-
body and Phillips Brooks, preachers to the University, who
had served under the present regime of religious worship
and instruction.
Passing from the reception room to the west, one saw a
large map of the University property, and near it a display
of photographs giving views of exteriors and interiors,
famous for the celebrated names which will forever be asso-
ciated with them. Here was collected together the exhibit
of the Department of Chemistry, and a collection of two hun-
dred and three new compounds discovered or investigated in
the laboratory.
Across the main isle was the exhibit of the Medical
School, probably the largest department exhibit in the group.
Anatomy, bacteriology, surgery, physiology, the dental school
and the veterinary school were represented. In this depart-
ment the feeding of young children attracted much attention.
The natural sciences held the entire eastern section of the
space. The plant of the University Museum and the Museum
of Comparative Zoology were set forth in detail by elaborate
architectural plans for each floor, supplemented by numerous
interior photographs showing the contents of the various
rooms. Near these were diagrams used in teaching, so ar-
ranged as to show the relative merits of different methods
and material. The character of the work done was further
illustrated by a large number of the students' drawings,
while in addition were to be seen colored plates and a glass
case containing note books, laboratory apparatus, and mate-
rial specially adapted to zoological work.
Two large cases offered by the mineral<^cal section, with-
out pretentious or heterogeneous display, showed the methods
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 107
and resources which offer peculiar facilities for study, teach-
ing and special research. In one of these was a large
number of carefully prepared specimens, labeled and arranged
to illustrate the investigations made in regard to the crystal-
line structure of meteoric iron, while in another there was to
be seen a beautiful collection of specimens illustrating the
formation and artificial coloring of agates.
Beautiful glass models of flowers distinctly claimed the
place of honor in the Botanical Department, to view which
many visitors made the arduous ascent to the south gallery
in order that their curiosity in regard to these famous flowers
might be gratified, and to study the resources of the Botanical
Museum as illustrated by the remarkably interesting cases of
specimens in economic botany, together with the colored
plates of Dr. Farlow's forthcoming work on North American
fungi.
All things considered, the Department of Geology, includ-
ing Palaeontology, Meteorology, Petrography and Physical
Geography, presented one of the most carefully elaborated,
systematic and instructive sections of the University exhibit.
Like the departments already mentioned, this was equipped
with excellent photographs of the museum, class work and
laboratory facilities. From the nature and variety of the
specimens, charts and diagrams, photographs and models used
in teaching, the space covered was considerable ; but it was
not in the extent and variety of the exhibit that its chief
merit was found. Here the teacher or student found methods,
tools, students' note books, specimens, models, charts and
drawings, so arranged that he might almost reconstruct the
courses and go over the work in detail.
The meteorological exhibit included a set of cloud photo-
graphs and maps used in teaching, together with laboratory
charts, maps and observations on temperature and pressure.
Petrography showed micro-photographic apparatus and ex*
108 RBPOBT OF BOABB OF
tremely interesting specimens, while physical geography as a
university study is to many people so much of a novelty that
the array of relief maps illustrating geographical development,
together with maps and charts used in teaching, attracted con-
siderable attention, doing much to dignify the study in the
minds of teachers.
Astronomy occupied the long walls of the room devoted to
physics, being crowded with a bewildering array of terrestrial
and celestial photographs and illustrations from the published
annals, interspersed with portraits of benefactors, such, for
instance, as William Cranch Bond, Uriah Atherton Boyden,
Henry Draper and Robert Treat Paine ; a large placard which
acknowledged the debt of the Observatory to successive bene-
factors, and enumerated the six permanent stations, the sixteen
temporary stations, the principal astronomical instruments, the
half century of published annals and the unpublished investi-
gations in which these benefactions have borne fruit. Photo-
graphs showed the rare equipment of the stations and the
unique facilities for obser\'ation afforded by the high altitude
and southern position of the Arequipa Observatory in Peru,
while other photographs showed the marvelous results of the
facilities described.
This report would be incomplete without some reference to
the numerous charts and diagrams illustrating the growth and
development of the University, and of its more prominent feat-
ures. Endowments, instructors, students, expenditures, for
a long series of years, were tabulated and presented in a form
most likely to impress the mind of the observer and to render
such impressions permanent.
As a means of showing the claim of Harvard University
upon public confidence in the future, no less than its obliga-
tions to public generosity in the past, her exhibit was amply
justified; but the University has a higher mission than self-
justification. In age and station she stands among the first
WORLD'S VATR MANAGERS. 109
of our institutions; and she cannot, if she would, escape the
responsibility of leadership. To her much has been given,
and of her much will be required in moulding educational tradi-
tions. It is because she saw the opportunity and responded
generously that she has earned the gratitude of educators
everywhere.
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY.
As shown upon the diagram, this institution occupied two
alcoves, one on either side of what was not inaptly called Col-
lege Row. At her east side was the elaborate display of Michi-
gan University, while on the west were Harvard, Princeton and
Columbia. To say that she filled this important position
creditably is to understate the truth, for there was a system and
completeness in her display that excelled in many particulars
the exhibits of the older institutions. The most careless ob-
server could not fail to get some knowledge of the character
and extent of work done by this school, while the student had
everything at hand which could aid him in his researches.
The thirteen courses were represented in such a manner as
to show facilities, methods and results of instruction. A
striking portion consisted of large photographs, of which
nearly three hundred were of exterior and interior views of
buildings, vistas of drawing rooms and laboratories, views of
groups of apparatus and of single important pieces of appa-
ratus, together with views of students at work. A set of
charts gave complete information concerning the distribution
of students geographically, the residence of graduates and
studies in the several courses.
Not many of the higher institutions of learning showed
students' work. The Institute of Technology, however, was
a notable exception in presenting a large amount of this
work, including drawings from the regular class work in the
several courses, partly framed and hanging on the walls and
110 BEPORT OF BOABD OF
partly in winged frames. There were also drawings accom-
panying the theses submitted by students at the end of their
courses, in proof of their competency to make original de-
signs or investigations of professional merit. Here also
were bound volumes of engineering drawings; full sets of
pieces in carpentry, forging, pattern making and the like,
made by students of mechanical engineering as a part of their
regular course. A separate four-page circular to be had from
the custodian gave an account of the instruction in the
mechanic arts; chemical products prepared by the students
in the laboratory of industrial chemistry and a collection of
yarns dyed in different colors or shades by the students in
industrial chemistry; one hundred and thirty-two theses as
originally presented and without revision by the members of
the graduating class of 1892.
Another striking feature of this exhibit was a set of port-
folios containing a detailed and fully illustrated description
of the methods of instruction and of the equipment of each
of the departments of the Institute, representing the adminis-
trative methods of the school, the organization of its libraries,
the arrangement of rooms in the various buildings, the appa-
ratus employed for heating and ventilating, and student life
at the Institute.
Visitors were likewise deeply impressed by a collection of
books and pamphlets used in instruction, which books and
pamphlets have been prepared with direct reference to the
work of the Institute by its own teachers, the larger part of
which have been printed for the use of its students without
formal publication. These aggregated several thousand pages,
with a large number of plates and illustrations constituting
a collection without a parallel in academic literature.
Among interesting secondary features of this exhibit may
be especially mentioned the Lowell School of Design, cover-
ing patterns for wall papers, carpets, etc.
WOBLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. Ill
In apparatus, typical pieces were shown in civil and
mining engineering and biology. A three-phase motor con-
strncted by students in electrical engineering in 1892 was
deserving of special mention. The Institute had also a
special exhibit, in connection with that of the other land-
grant colleges, in the Agricultural Building.
The courts of the Institute, as indeed of all our educa-
tional institutions, were visited by vast numbers during the
six months of the great Exposition. The large majority,
of course, simply wandered through, looking about for
something curious or striking; but many hundreds of ear-
nest students of science and technology, superintendents of
schools, teachers and others, visited this exhibit for the
purpose of careful and protracted examination, receiving
therefrom instruction and inspiration.
AMHERST COLLEGE.
In con^parison with that allotted to Harvard University,
the other colleges of the Commonwealth had meagre space
for their exhibits. In an alcove ten feet deep and seven
and a half feet wide it seems impossible to put a repre-
sentation of a great educational institution that shall do
justice to the exhibitor.
From the first, Amherst decided to exclude from its ex-
hibit not only everything of the nature of curios, memora-
bilia and relics, but also materials of every sort, apparatus
of all kinds, museum specimens and the like, no matter
what might be their special interest, historic or scientific.
Pictorial and photographic art was alone depended upon.
First in importance were seven characteristic photographs of
interiors and exteriors of buildings, enlarged by solar pro-
cess to a size thirty by forty inches, — among them the
general group of the main buildings, the president's house,
112 EBPORT OF BOABD OF
*
the library, the college church, Walker Hall, Interiors of
the library reading-room, and the gallery of casts of ancient
sculpture. A chart illustrated geographically the total num-
ber of students at Amherst during each year since its or-
ganization in 1821, the number entering the freshman class
annually, the number entering the three upper classes (al-
ways about one-seventh of the entire number entering), and
the number of the graduating class. This diagram most
forcibly exhibited the instant success of the college at the
time when President Moore came from Williamstown as
Amherst's first president, bringing with him a large colony
from the student body there, and after a period of depres-
sion, the quick rebound and the return of prosperity on the
election of Dr. Edward Hitchcock; the further growth and
ample development under Dr. Steams and President Seelye,
and the sudden leap to Amherst's present numbers upon
the accession of President Gates.
Portraits of all the former presidents were there, with
those of the present president, his faculty, and the board
of trustees, as also many of her famous graduates, as fol-
lows: Eev. Henry Ward Beecher, Rev. Richard Salter
Storrs, Rev. Roswell Dwight Hitchcock, Bishop Huntingtoui
General Francis A. Walker, Postmaster-General Maynardi
Governor Bullock, Judge Lord, Judge Spofford and a score
of others.
The space did not permit an exhibit, extensive and slg^
nificant as it might have been, of the printed works of the
alumni of Amherst. A select case of volumes, however,
presented the publications of the members of the present
faculty, among them being the Classics, edited by Professor
Tyler and Professor Crowell; papers on Ethics and Eco-
nomics, by Professor Clark; reports of the archaeological
expeditions of Dr. Starrett in Asia Minor, the astronomical
publications by Professor Todd, volumes on the histoiy of
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGBBS. 113
Physical Culture and Anthropometry at Amherst (where the
modem college gymnasium originated), the rhetorics of Pro-
fessor Genung, and the well-known indexes to periodical
and general literature by Mr. Fletcher of the College
Library. ,
By the use of plans and elevations the recently erected
buildings were represented, as also were the new laboratories
for physics and chemistry, which latter have just been com-
pleted and equipped at a cost of $100,000.
The work of other scientific departments was completely
shown by Dr. Hitchcock's photographs and anthropometric
charts and studies, with tables and statistics ; Professor
Todd's photographs of the transit of Venus, in 1882, at the
Lick Observatory, and the views illustrating the work of the
United States Eclipse Expedition to West Africa in 1889,
under his charge ; and charts showing the geology of the
region east of the Hoosac Mountains in Massachusetts, the
work of Professor Emerson, recently published by the United
States Geological Survey.
The undergraduate life of the college at the present day
was not forgotten. All the student organizations, their liter-
ary periodicals, and the houses of the nine Greek-letter frater-
nities, so prominent a feature in the life of Amherst students
of to-day, were satisfactorily exhibited.
By adherence to the lines above indicated, the exhibit of
Amherst College was condensed into such compact form that,
although everything of importance had representation, the in-
spection of the entire collection demanded only a few minutes,
and so small an exhibit at so great a fair was, in some re-
spects, greater than a large one.
114 BBPOBT OF BOARD OF
CLARK UNIVERSITY.
The exhibit of Clark University was confined to books,
pamphlets and photographs. The books incloded twenty-
nine volumes, the publications of the faculty of the college.
These consisted of two volumes of Mathematics and Physics ;
one each of Biology and Theses for Ph.D. ; four volumes of
Psychology and Education; Hegel, the national phUosopher
of Germany; Chemistry: four volumes of the '^American
Journal of Psychology;" four volumes of the ^^ Journal of
Morphology;" Igneous Rocks of Arkansas, by J. Francis
Williams; Pedagogical Seminary; Criminology, by Arthur
MacDonald; Early Registers and Reports; Aspects of Ger-
man Culture, by G. Stanley Hall ; Methods of Teaching and
Studying History ; Bibliography of Education, by G. Stanley
Hall, and a History of Modem Philosophy in two volumes,
by B. C. Burt.
The p^phlets were numerous and gave full illustrations
of the University in its various departments, the photographs
designed to show the facilities for instruction being classi-
fied as follows: —
Fifteen, illustrating facilities for the teaching of modem
mathematics ; fifteen, illustrating facilities for teaching chem-
istry. In addition to these there were twenty-eight photo-
graphs illustrating the facilities for teaching biology, twenty-
one of exteriors and interiors of the college buildings, forty
illustrating the facilities for teaching psychology, and sixteen
illustrating the facilities for teaching pedagogy.
Clark University devotes itself entirely to graduate work,
being the only institution of its kind in the oountiy. This
exhibit attracted much attention,' and it was a cause of much
surprise to many of its visitors, who, in general, were poorly
informed with respect to the character of its work, and who
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGSBS. 115
had not expected to find such opportunities for original in*
vestigation on this side of the Atlantic.
TUFTS COLLEGE.
The exhibit of Tofts College was modest and attractive.
It afforded the visitor ample opportunity to learn its impor-
tant features without wearying him with detailed information,
and consisted of twenty-five framed photographs of college
buildings, interiors and exteriors, three charts showing
courses of study, a map of the college grounds, a floor plan
of Bamum Museum, a photograph of the college church, to-
gether with pamphlets describing new courses of study and
catalogues of the college.
A unique part of the exhibit was the collection of charts,
showing, by graphic methods, the course of study recently
adopted, in which course Tufts has taken advanced ground,
and may with pride see the other colleges of this country
following where she has led.
W/LLIAMS COLLEGE.
The exhibit of Williams College was arranged as a recep-
tion room, comfortable chairs inviting the visitor to rest,
and tables affording the alumni' an opportunity to write.
The walls of the room were decorated with thirty-three
large photographs of college buildings, exteriors and interiors,
and with portraits of her distinguished alumni.
MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE.
The colleges for women united in furnishing their space as a
reception room, a large table occupying the centre of the room,
two large bookcases holding portions of the exhibit, and chairs
provided for the comfort of visitors. On the table were regis-
ters for the alumnae of the colleges, and the exhibits of the
116 BEFOBT OF BOABD OF
Society to Encourage Studies at Home and of the Woman's
Educational Association. The south wall of this room and a
part of the table were devoted to the exhibit of Mount Holyoke
College. Hanging on the centre of this wall was a large picture
of Mary Lyon, beneath which was an embellished chart, the
brief sketch of the history of the remarkable institution which
her interest and devotion brought into existence. Around this,
as a centre, were grouped large photographs of exteriors and
interiors. These were supplemented by a map of the college
grounds, by floor plans of college buildings, by wall frames
filled with photographs, and complete information concerning
the work of the institution.
The following volumes added interest to the exhibit : —
The history of Mount Holyoke Seminary, the first half cen-
tury, from 1837 to 1887 ; the Greneral Catalogue ; bound Doc-
uments and Addresses ; bound Catalogues of Mount Holyoke
Seminary from 1837 to 1893 ; bound volumes of ^^The Mount
Holyoke," a periodical published by its students.
As the ^' mother of colleges for women,*' Mount Holyoke at-
tracted much attention from visitors of every land. Its long
list of distinguished alumnae was represented by many whose
fame is world-wide.
WELLES LEY COLLEGE,
Wellesley sent the largest exhibit in the room, and one
of the most attractive. She was also the only one of the
smaller colleges to furnish an attendant.
The college occupied one-half of the east wall and one of the
bookcases. Her exhibit consisted in part of the following : —
Eleven framed photographs of exteriors.
Large album contaimng full account of the organization and
administration of the college, with statistics and otiier general in*
formation ; curriculum of the school, with full explanation of tiie
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 117
course of stady in the yarions departments and of Hie methods of
instruction; photographs of interiors and facDities for instmo-
tion.
Statutes of Welleslej College.
Blanks and circulars used in administration.
*' Matriculation Book," given to the student on matriculation,
and presented by Hie student with the signatures of instructors,
showing that a requisite amount of work hag been done for the
Bachelor^s degree.
Legislation of the Faculty of Wellesley College.
Reports of President Shafer, 1888-1892.
Alunmse Registry, 1879-1885.
Record of Wellesley College officers and students, 1875-1891.
Calendars of Wellesley College.
Sketch of the founder of Wellesley College, by Marion Petton
Guild.
Illustrated article on Wellesley College, containing portrait of
Henry F. Durant, founder of the college
Syllabus for Course in Constitutional Histoiy; Syllabus for
Course in Economics, by Katherine Coman.
Thesis in Economics, showing Use of Documents.
Syllabus for Study of Italian Art, by E. H. Denio.
Outlines for Course in History of Civilization, by M. A. Knox.
Specimen Blanks for Drawing in Zoology, by Mary A. Wilcox.
Specimen Blanks and Outlines for Physiology, by Caroline
Woodman.
Specimen Outlines and Reports upon Observations in Experi-
mental Psychology ; article on Experimental Psychology at Welles-
ley College; Photographs of Number Forms, by Mary Whiton
Calkins.
Statistical Tables, Wellesley College Gynmasium, 1891; Record
of Measurements of 40 Freshmen, 1891-2; Anthropometric Table
arranged firom Measurement of 1^00 Students, Lucile Eaton HiU
and M. Anna Wood.
Specimen Syllabus Papers in Course in New Testament; Intro-
duction, by Sarah F. Whiting.
Specimen Syllabus Papers in Physical Astronomy; Specimen
118 REPORT OF BOARD OF
Sheets of Laboratory Directions in Physics; Records of Experi-
ments in Physical Laboratory, by Sarah F. YHiiting.
File of ^ Wellesley Magazine," published by Students.
Scripture Studies on the Origin and Destiny of Man, by A. £.
F. Morgan.
The graduates of Wellesley manifested the greatest enthu-
siasm in behalf of their cUma mater. Weekly receptions
were held at the exhibit, under the auspices of the Chicago
Alumnse Association, being always attended by large numbers
of former students.
SMiTH COLLEGE.
Smith College occupied one-half of the eastern wall of the
room, within which space were to be found the following : —
Framed photographs of exteriors and interiors, showing the
various buildings of the college and its facilities for instruc-
tion; framed photographs giving pictures of scenes in the
Greek play '^ Electra," as rendered at the college; a bound
volume entitled ^^A Greek Play and its Presentation;" a
chart showing the various courses of study in the college ; a
chart showing the attendance in the different departments
since its organization ; a map of the grounds of the college ;
floor plans of college buildings; a photograph of equatorial
telescope; and calendars.
This young and vigorous institution made many friends by
its exhibit. The ample facilities for instruction, the won-
derful growth in numbers, the high standing wen by its
gi*aduate&, all combined to extend its influence and to add
to its reputation. A weekly reception was held by the grad-
uates, which receptions were well attended.
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 119
THE SOCIETY FOR THE COLLEQIATE INSTRUCTION OF WMEN.
The ''Harvard Annex" made a qniet display of her baild*
ings, class rooms, libraries, etc., together with catalogues
and comrses of instruction. A pamphlet for free distribu*
tion gave all necessary information concerning the history
and work of the institution.
THE AMERICAN COLLEGE FOR QIRLS AT CONSTANTINOPLE AND THE
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GIRLS IN SPAIN,
These institutions held space with Massachusetts colleges
for women, because they received their charters from the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
The former showed photographs of school buildings, views
of Constantinople, portrait of Miss Mary M. Patrick, presi-
dent, course of study, specimens of pupils' work in drawing
and various branches of scholastic education, diploma of the
college, and specimens of embroidery, sewing and other
handiwork of the pupils; while the Institute for Girls in
Spain exhibited framed photographs of San Sebastian, the
home of the school, a portrait of Mrs. Alice Groidon Gulick,
director of the Institute, a diploma of the Institute, photo-
graphs of the faculty, instructors and graduates, specimens of
the handiwork of the pupils, framed exhibits in botany, and
pamphlets for distribution, giving account of the work of the
institution.
Both institutions gained friends and influence by their work,
and their exhibits formed an exceedingly attractive feature
of the educational display of the State.
Respectfully submitted,
George E. Gat.
120 BEPORT OF BOARD OF
MINES AND MINING.
When it became necessary to consider the question
of an exhibit from the Commonwealth in the Depart-
ment of Mines and Mining, the Massachusetts Board
of World's Fair Managers placed itself in correspond-
ence with Prof. N. S. Shaler, of the Lawrence
Scientific School of Harvard University, with the view
of securing from him suggestions as to the best way
in which this work could be done*
These conferences resulted in the nomination, by
Professor Shaler, of Mr. George E. Ladd, an instructor
in the department of geology of Harvard University,
as an agent of the Board to take charge of the
exhibit. Mr. Ladd was accordingly appointed to this
position in August, 1892.
Mr. Ladd's report, which follows, tells of the work
done by him, and of the results accomplished. The
collection made by the Board under Mr. Ladd's
superintendence reflected credit upon the State, re-
sulting in bringing together the largest display of the
mineralogy, petrography and building stones of the
State which has ever been made. The best testimony
to the completeness of this exhibit is to be found in
the words of conamendation which have appeared in
a nimiber of technical magazines, one of which, the
"Journal of Geology," a periodical of recognized high
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 121
scientific authority, in speaking of the exhibits of the
New England States, but more especially of Massa-
chusetts, says : —
The exhibits of the New England States are naturally
representative of less economic value than those of some of
the other States, because, with the exception of building and
ornamental stones, most of their mining products are of
subordinate importance ; but, at the same time, they display
what they have in a systematic and consistent manner. The
Massachusetts exhibit is thoroughly characteristic and well
arranged, showing not only the economic products, but also
many rocks and minerals of purely scientific interest.
The official statement of the Massachusetts Board
of World's Fair Managers shows the amount of money
which was expended on this exhibit. The Board feels
sure that it was wise for Massachusetts to thus show
herself in this building side by side with the other
States of the Union.
It will be noticed in Mr. Ladd's report that, through
carelessness on the part of the Exposition authorities,
one of the cases containing a part of the exhibit was
lost. The Massachusetts Board of World's Fair Man-
agers, however, is glad to be able to state that,
although it was quite impossible to place an exact
value on the contents of this case, it has adjusted
the loss with the Exposition authorities at the sum
of 1150.
In referring to the report of Mr. Ladd, herewith,
122 REPORT OF BOARD OF
the Board desires thus publicly to thank him for the
interest and energy which he gave to this work, with-
out whichy or without the care in the many details
incident to the collecting and installing of this exhibit,
its value would have been very much lessened. It
was certainly to the citizens of the Commonwealth a
dignified exhibit of the State's resources, and to the
geologist and scientist it was a display which called
forth praise and awakened interest.
Massctchusetls Board of WorUTs Fair Matiagers: —
Dear Sirs : — I herewith submit the following report con-
cerning the Massachusetts exhibit in the Mines and Mining
Building at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago : —
About the middle of August, 1892, 1 was appointed by you
as agent to collect and arrange a representative set of the
minerals of our State for exhibition at the World's Colum*
bian Exposition. A short time afterwards the scope of
my work was enlarged and a general large plan formu-
lated to make our exhibit cover, in addition to the min-
erals, the building stones, fossils, and our most typical and
geologically interesting rocks. This gave four groups of
specimens to be collected, viz., building stones, minerals,
rocks and fossils.
The task of collecting, arranging, shipping and setting up
the exhibit in Chicago was almost entirely my personal work,
although I was assisted most generously by the local col-
lectors in the State. Many of these gave considerable time
and labor in visiting localities with me and quarrying speci-
mens. Moreover, the call for specimens, either as gifts or
as loans to the exhibit, which was made to the collectors of
the State met with a most generous response. The greatest
WOBLD'S FAIR MAKA6ERS. 123
difficulty was encoantered in getting together the collection
of building stones, and this only attained its measure of
completeness through most persistent efforts and a large
amount of time spent in personally quarrying specimens and
in getting them dressed.
A large number of the polished specimens for the petro-
graphical collection were rubbed down and polished by the
firm of Badger Brothers of West Quincy, without any charge.
It is not possible, however, in the limits of this report, to
mention individually all of those who so kindly gave assist-
ance in one way or another.
I regret to have to record the loss of a part of our collec-
tion at Chicago. This unfortunate occurrence was due prob-
ably to some official of the Mines and Mining Department,
as the Transportation Department had a receipt from the
former for the full number of cases that where shipped, but
the Mines and Mining Department was unable to turn over
to me seven of these cases and could in no way account for
their absence. A large amount of time was given in search-
ing for these boxes, without avail.
THE BUILDING STONE COLLECTION.
The building stone collection proved to be the most difficult
to make, but was perhaps the most complete and valuable
of any one of the four groups. In determining the size
and shape of specimens for this collection it was necessaiy
to take into consideration such dimensions as would clearly
show the material and yet would not be so large as to make
the specimens too heavy for exhibition purposes in cabinets.
In regard to the shape, it was to some extent necessary to
consider the nature of the rock to be shown and the particular
qualities to be made prominent. With these points in view,
it seemed best to select for the exhibit, in general, a cube
124 HBFORT OF BOABD OF
modelled after the collections at the Smithaonian Institation,
having edges foar inches in length, the front of the cube
polished (where possible), the back rough dressed, and the
other sides dressed in various ways so as to best show the
qualities of the stone, all of the faces having four-inch mar-
gins of drove-work, with the exception of the front one. In
addition to these cubes, a number of our quarrymen were
allowed to furnish certain specimens of odd shapes and sizes,
within certain limits, for special purposes.
This part of our exhibit as set up in Chicago contained about
one hundi*ed and twenty dressed four-inch cubes, six slabs, six
by twelve inches square, showing ^^sapfaced" rock; one slab
of granite about a foot square and an eighth of an inch in thick-
ness, so cut as to show the extreme toughness of the granite ;
and one life-size carved negro's head, in sandstone, to show
the uniformity in color and texture, and the susceptibility to
carving of this sandstone.
The number of cubes in our exhibit comprised more than one-
fourth of the whole number of such cubes furnished by all the
States.
The rocks which were represented by the collection consisted
of granites, syenites, gneisses, porphyry, diabase, diorite, sand-
stone, verde-antique, marble, scapolite and serpentine. The
granites and gneisses represented the great building stone in-
dustry of the State, and were present in the largest numbers,
and perhaps the greatest variety, showing a wide range of color
and texture. The serpentine and verde-antique collection was
said to be, by experts, the best and most varied ever gotten
together in this country. The scapolite was exhibited in a pol-
ished and dressed specimen for the first time.
The most important localities represented in this collection
by the gi'anites, gneisses, etc., were Quincy, Cape Ann,
Lowell, Graniteville, Chelmsford, Fitchburg, Monson, Fall
River, Leominster, Milford and Chester. The granites from
WORLD'S FAIR MAKAOERS. 125
Milford are coarse-grained, pink in color, and warm and
beautiful looking. Specimens from the Quincy Granite
Association vary somewhat in texture and color, one sample
from Braintree having a distinct reddish tint ; the others vary
from grayish to greenish. The Cape Ann specimens from
Rockport, Bay View, Pigeon Cove, Lanesville and Gloucester
vary from gray to deep greenish and bluish tints. The Fall
River gi'anites are of a light pink, resembling somewhat the
Milford specimens.
The gneisses vary in color and structure, especially in the
amount of banding visible. The range of color is from a
light to a dark gray. They come from the districts about
Lowell, and westward and southward to Chester.
The marbles were mostly from Lee, North Adams, West
Stockbridge and Van Deusenville. A very beautiful piece
of statuary marble came from Stoneham. The marbles vary
in texture and color from pure white to dark bluish shades.
The handsomest specimens came from Lee, North Adams and
Stoneham.
The verde-antique and serpentine came from Chester, Lynn-
field, and, mostly, from Newbury. The specimens of verde-
antique from Newbury show a great variety of combinations,
in white, yellow, green and gray. The serpentine from Chester
is of a dark green color, and took a high, lustrous polish;
that from Lynnfield is a much lighter green color.
The sandstone came from the Norcross quaiTies at Long-
meadow, and is a very uniform textured, compact standstone,
of four different shades, from, reddish brown to chocolate.
The other specimens are mostly from scattered localities
where the stone industry has been but little or not at all de-
veloped. The greater part of these specimens were obtained
by visiting the localities, blasting out the rock, and having
it dressed according to the same specifications which had been
furnished the quarrymen of the State.
126 BKPOBT OF BOARD OF
THE MINERAL COLLECTION.
The mineral collection, in the number of specimens, largely
exceeded the other groaps, containing in all about six hun-
dred and fifty specimens, representing about one hundred
and forty species. There were specimens from the following
mineralogical groups : The native elements, sulphides, oxides,
silicates, tantalates, columbates, phosphates, sulphates, carbon-
ates and hydrocarbons. By far the greater part of these,
however, belonged to the group of silicates.
The attempt was made to obtain a systematic and complete
set, as far as possible, of the minerals occurring in the State.
This idea was carried out rather than the one of getting to-
gether minerals selected especially for display, or to give a
false impression of our mining resources. I think ours was
the only State exhibit which carried out this idea.
The minerals came practically from all parts of the State,
though probably the Berkshire Hills proved the most prolific
sources of supply. The localities which perhaps furnished the
most important collections were the regions immediately about
Chester, Chesterfield, Tyringham, Bolton, Fitchburg (includ-
ing Lunenburg, Lancaster and Sterling), and Lockport.
Many of the minerals of Chester, Bolton and Rockport are
very large, and some of those from Chester and Bolton un-
usually beautiful.
In the search for minerals, one species, new not only to
Massachusetts but to this part of the country, was found at
Bockport, in a pegmatite segregation in the granite in the
main quarry of the Rockport Granite Company. At the
suggestion of Dr. Huntington, instructor in mineralogy at
Harvard College, an analysis of this mineral was made by
Mr. T. H. Currie, his assistant, and it proved to be fayalite,
a ferrous ortho-silicate. Fayalite rarely occurs massive, but
commonly in minute ortho-rhombic crystals. It occurs in
WOBLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 127
Ireland in pegmatite, and as nodules in the volcanic rocks
at Fayal, Azores, and in lythophjses in rhyolite at Obsidian
Cliffs in Yellowstone Park, and also in a massive form at
Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado. The specimen as found
weighed about forty pounds, and was a distinctly crystalline
mass. It occurred with magnetite and one or two other
minerals which have not yet been deterilLined. It was most
unfortunate that the finest part of this specimen was among
the boxes lost by the World's Fair oflScials.
THE PETROGRAPHiCAL COLLECTION.
No attempt was made to gather anything like a complete
petrographical collection. Such a task was alike too great
for the time and means at my command. As has been said
above, the only petrographical specimens collected were such
as would, in the first place, show in a general way the varie-
ties of rocks occurring in the State ; and, secondly, those
particular kinds which are interesting on account of their
classic character in geographical literature. About one-half
of this collection, however, consisted of specimens of irregular
outline and of various sizes, with one face smoothed and
polished, in order to show to the greatest advantage the color
and structure of the rock. This collection was probably the
most beautiful and striking part of the exhibit. The ser-
pentines, felsites, breccias and granites, in general, were the
handsomest varieties in this collection.
THE COLLECTION OF FOSSILS.
Few fossils are found in the State. There are certain
localities, however, which have become classic for such as
occur there, and, representing these, specimens were obtained
as loans from the palseontological laboratory of Harvard
128 BBFOBT OF BOASD OF
College. It was possible to make a very fine exhibit of the
fossil foot-prints which occar in triassic sandstone at several
points in the Connecticut Valley, through the kindness of
Mr. T. M. Stoughton of Gill, Mass.
The exhibit as set up in Chicago was divided into two
parts, the building stone collection being located in the east
gallery with the general collection of building stones. The
minerals were in the west gallery and occupied there six
double upright cabinets, and a semi-pyramidal-shaped set of
shelves placed against the wall between two rows of cabi-
nets. The minerals and rocks were grouped synoptically as
far as the nature of the cabinets would allow. The exhibit
would have perhaps been more effective had all been ex-
hibited in the same place, but the advantage to be gained
by separation was through the opportunity for a comparison
of our building stones with those from other States that
were exhibited in the immediate vicinity.
In closing this report it is both justice and my pleasure
to acknowledge here my personal indebtedness to you for
your constant courtesies and intelligent aid throughout the
progress of my work.
Very respectfully yours,
(Signed) Geokoe £. Ladd.
WOKU>*8 FAIB MANAaSBS. 129
STATE BOARD OF HEALTH.
It is with very great pleasure that the Board of
World's Fair Managers call the attention of the read-
ers of this report to that of Prof. William T. Sedgwick
of the Institute of Technology, under whose charge was
placed the valuable exhibit made by the Massachusetts
State Board of Health.
Professor Sedgwick's report gives in detail the nature
of the work done by him. It may not, however, be
generally known that no State in the Union has through
its Board of Health accomplished work either of the
same nature or of the same degree of usefulness and
benefit as has that of this Commonwealth.
The exhibit was of very great credit not only to
the State Board of Health but also to the State, in
that it served at once to place her in the very front
rank in the scientific subjects to which it had special
reference; it has received well-merited praise from
many scientific journals ; it was a subject of study by
the scientists and sanitary engineers who assembled in
Chicago to attend the conference having to do with
these special topics; and, as Professor Sedgwick in his
report says, the Massachusetts exhibit obtained *<the
highest award given, both for general excellence and
for special sanitary investigations.''
130 KEPOBT OF BOAHD OF
The ^^ Journal of the American Medical Association,'*
in an article of some length devoted especially to the
Massachusetts sanitary exhibit, says: —
The exhibit of the State Board of Health of Massachu-
setts in the Bureau of Hygiene and Sanitation in the An-
thropological Building at the World's Columbian Exposition
is one that should be examined by all interested in sanitary
work. It shows the various lines of work done by the
Board as well as the results of such investigations.
In concluding his very interesting account of the ex-
hibit of the Commonwealth, the writer says : —
Massachusetts has been more liberal in its appropriations
to the State Board of Health than any other State in the
Union, and as a result the work accomplished in many re-
spects is better than any done anywhere else in the civilized
world. The exhibit is an object lesson worthy of study by
other States, as, owing to the increased density of popula-
tion and increase of manufacturing wastes, our water sup-
plies are annually becoming more polluted, and the necessity
for such work more and more imperative.
The <^ Boston Medical and Surgical Journal," in an
article alluding to this exhibit, gives likewise to the
Commonwealth great praise for the part which she has
played in the scientific investigations which the exhibit
calls attention to, when it says: *^ Among the interest-
ing hygienic exhibits at Chicago that of the Massa-
chusetts State Board of Health is particularly valuable,"
and ^^the display of the official reports and blanks
which are used for the routine work of the Board are
world's pair managbbs. 131
full of suggestions for physicians from small towns
where local sanitation is just beginning," while the
"Engineering News," in its article entitled "Sanitation
and Sanitary Appliances at the Columbian Exposition,"
says of the contribution from the Conmoionwealth,
"Massachusetts had a very complete exhibit showing
models of its Experimental Station and its various
features, samples of filtered water with analyses at-
tached, yiews of sewage purification works in operation
in Massachusetts and a large map showing the normal
chlorine of the waters of various parts of the State."
These extracts surely prove this exhibit to have been
one of which the State may well be proud, for it not
only carried to the minds of visitors proof of the excel-
lent work done under the supervision of the State
Board of Health, but to the seeker after scientific
knowledge it was of decided benefit and must prove of
very great value to any other State desiring to improve
the health and sanitary condition of its citizens.
2%e MassctchuaeUs Board of World's Fair Managers.
Dbab Sibs: — It was originally intended that the exhibit
of the Bureau of Hygiene and Sanitation, including the ex-
hibits of State Boards of Health, should occupy a portion of
the space devoted to the Department of Liberal Arts, of
which it formed one subdivision. But as assignments pro-
ceeded it became evident that the space allotted to liberal
arts was altogether inadequate. Accordingly, at the last
moment, the Exposition authorities decided to erect an en-
tirely separate building (knowa as the Anthropological Build-
132 KBPOKT OP BOAKD OP
ing), as a kind of annex to that devoted to the liberal
arts, and to assign to it not only the entire exhibit of an-
thropology and of charities and correction, bat also that of
the Bureau of Hygiene and Sanitation.
The State Board of Health of Massachusetts had very
early been urged to make an exhibit, and the Massachusetts
Commissioners signified their readiness to co-operate. The
Board itself, recognizing the opportunity and the duty of
making more generally known its work, and especially the
results of its long-continued investigations upon water sup-
ply and sewerage, its system of sanitary advice to cities
and towns, and its regular inspection of food and drugs,
signified its approval and designated as its special repre-
sentative in the matter Prof. W. T. Sedgwick, biologist of
the Board.
Inasmuch as a new building had to be erected at the last
moment, as has been said above, there were great delays.
The space originally applied for by the Board was 1,200
square feet. It appeared in the end that this amount of
room might easily have been used to advantage; but the
amount finally granted was only 500 square feet. After-
wards, when it became evident to the authorities themselves
that this amount was far too little, an additional grant of
120 square feet was secured by the Board, to be used as
an " annex."
The exhibit already designed and prepared in Boston and
Lawrence under the personal direction of Professor Sedgwick
was finally installed in a plain but dignified court with an
adjoining annex on the floor of the Anthropological Build-
ing early in June, being not only the first of the State
exhibits in the Bureau of Hygiene and Sanitation to be
made ready, but also the first in respect to space oocq*
pied and in respect to the range of materials and results
exhibited.
WOBLD'S FAIR MANAOSRS. 133
Over the main pavilion rested the coat-of-arms of the
Commonwealth, accompanied by the legend ^^ Maasachusetts
State Board of Health," while on the rear wall was hong
a large map of the State bearing in red the isochlorsy or
lines joining points of equal normal chlorine, of which the
establishment constituted an original and impoilant feature
of the sanitary investigations of the Board in 1887, 1888
and 1889 ; and because this work is still unique as well as
of fundamental importance in water analysis, it attracted
marked attention. The construction of the map itself de-
serves a word in passing. It was large, viz., about six-
teen feet long by ten feet wide, and was made by mounting,
side by side, in their proper places, the separate sheets of
the excellent map of Massachusetts published by the Topo-
graphical Survey Commission. The result was a map of
unusual beauty of workmanship and great precision —
something in itself worthy to be exhibited by the Com-
monwealth.
The main pavilion contained also the principal and most
notable feature .of the exhibit, viz., a display of the
methods and results of those investigations upon water
supply and sewerage which have not only formed a sound
basis for the sanitary advice given by the Board to many
cities and towns of the Commonwealth, but have also per-
ceptibly influenced the theory and practice of sanitation in
these matters all over the United States. In particular,
the work of the Lawi*ence Experiment Station was made
clear, for the reason that this is the first station of the
kind in America, if not in the world. A model of the
station, some eight feet long, was shown, as were also
numerous drawings, photographs and actual sections of sand
filters ; one indoor filter, complete ; samples of crude sew-
age, purified sewage, sands, river waters, filtered waters,
apparatus, both chemical and biological, etc. Typical sur-
134 EBPORT OF BOARD OP
face waters, ground waters, waters from reservoirs, tape,
wells, and the like, with analyses attached, served to illoa-
trate in an instructive and comparative way the character-
istics of the public water supplies of Massachusetts. Some
of the more obvious practical results of the scientific in-
vestigations of the Board were shown in the annex pavilion
by means of the statistics of advice to cities and towns,
illustrating the services already rendered by the Board to
the citizens of the Commonwealth; and also by the bromide
enlargements of photographs of sewage fields actually in
operation at Framingham and Marlborough; drawings of the
new municipal sand filter for the city of Lawrence (since
successfully placed in operation) ; and drawings and plans
of the Metropolitan sewerage systems.
Besides these things, the Department of Food and Drug
Inspection made a showing of its methods and results, pre-
pared by Dr. Worcester, the analyst, and Dr. Abbott, the
secretary of the Board.
Instructive models of trichirui (the pork-worm) and charts
bearing upon trichinosis in Massachusetts were also on
view, having been prepared under the direction of Prof. E.
L. Mark of Harvard University.
The general work of the Board was exemplified by maps
and charts illustrating the geographical and seasonal dis-
tribution of the various diseases, together with many phe-
nomena of vital statistics, prepared by Dr. Abbott, the
secretary of the Board. Investigations of epidemics were
illustrated by maps and diagrams of a high order of me-
chanical excellence ; and important laws of change in the
quality of natural waters, worked out by the experts of
the Board, were described in simple and convenient terms.
An attendant was constantly on hand as a guide to visit-
ors; and a printed description of the entire exhibit facili-
tated its study.
WOBLD'S FAIB MANA6BBS. 136
Without disparagement of the exhibits of other States, it
may fairly be said that the exhibit of the Massachusetts
State Board of Health, taken as a whole, was the most
extensive and the most important display of sanitary science
made at Chicago. It is therefore gratifying to record, in
conclusion, the fact that this exhibit won the highest award
given, both for general excellence and for special sanitary
investigations.
Respectfully yours,
(Signed) W. T. Sedgwick.
136 BBPOBT OF BOABD OF
CHARITIES AND CORRECTIONS.
Following the same course which was taken in most
of the departments under the supervision of the Board,
its members invited a number of men and women in-
terested in the subject of charities and correction to
meet at their office in the Sears Building for the pur-
pose of forming an organization by means of which
the best possible exhibit could be made in Chicago of
this all-important department of pubHc and private
work.
This meeting resulted in the appointment by the
Board of the following committee to co-operate with it
in its endeavors to make the representation of the
Commonwealth creditable and of benefit to the State:
Dr. Eichard L, Hodgdon, Mr. C. W. Birtwell, Dr. W.
M. Bullard, Mr. James H. Lewis, Hon. Bobert Treat
Paine, Mr. Thomas F. Ring, Miss Zilpha D. Smith,
Mr. William W. Wilde and Mr. Stephen C. Wright-
ington.
On Feb. 1, 1892, after the death of their chairman,
Dr. Hodgdon, Mr. George W. Johnson and Col. Henry
Stone were added to the committee.
On June 17, 1892, Mr. Joseph Lee was chosen sec-
retary of the committee and placed in chaise of the
work assigned to them.
WOKLIVS FAIR MAKAGEBS. 137
In calling attention to Mr. Lee's report, which is
hereto annexed, the Board takes great satisfieu^tion in
being able to say that there was no exhibit in this de-
partment which awakened a greater interest, was more
favorably commented upon, or was the subject of
greater study than was that brought together through
the energies of this committee, and the Board feels
that great praise is due to the secretary, Mr. Joseph
Lee, for the enthusiasm and interest which he brought
to his work.
Massachttseits Board of World's Fair Managers, Boston,
Dear Sibs: — At your request I beg to hand you herewith
my report as secretary of the sab-committee appointed by you
to have charge of the exhibit made by the Commonwealth in
the Department of Charities and Correction at the World's
Colombian Exposition.
Massachusetts sent fifty separate exhibits in this department,
many of which consisted simply of a book of reports. On
the other hand, many were complete and elaborate.
The work of the committee was of two sorts : first, stimulat-
ing the Yarious societies and institutions in their department,
whether public or private, to send exhibits, and giving them
advice in the matter; second, the preparation of a general
view of the charities and correction of Massachusetts.
The first work to be done was to get as complete a list as
possible of the charitable and correctional societies of the
State. This could be partially obtained from the report of the
State Treasurer and from other sources, but to make the list
complete the facts had to be gathered by the committee for
itself. For this purpose letters were sent to the secretaries of
^
138 BEPOBT OF BOABD OF
the various associated charities societies of the State , a circular
also being sent to the overseers of the poor in every town and
city in the State, a second and third letter and circolar being
sent when answers were not obtained. As fast as the names
of societies came in there was forwarded to each a circular giv-
ing all necessary directions and suggestions as to how to make
an exhibit. With this circular was sent the official circular
issued by the Charities and CoiTection Bureau at Chicago, and
also a number of printed questions, the answers to which were
needed for certain statistics to be used in the general central
exhibit which the committee was preparing. For this latter
purpose, that of gathering statistics, it was afterwards found
that postal cards with a paid reply were considerably more
effective, and these were used for gathering certain of the sta-
tistics in regard to our public institutions which were not to be
found in any of the published reports.
EXHIBITS OF SEPARATE INSTITUTIONS.
The remainder of the work in regard to separate institutions,
public as well as private, consisted in letters and interviews
urging them to exhibit, and, in almost every case, in sugges-
tions as to what the exhibit should consist of. The main stress
was laid upon obtaining representative exhibits, supplemented
by as large a number as possible of minor and less complete
exhibits. Thus very complete exhibits were obtained of the
McLean Hospital, of Mrs. Shaw's Day Nurseries, of the Bos-
ton Overseers of the Poor, the Children's Aid Society, the
Women's Reformatory Prison, the Lyman School for Boys, the
St. Vincent de Paul Society, and of many other representative
institutions. Perhaps the exhibit of the Boston City Hospital
stands at the head of these representative exhibits. It should
be added that the exhibit made by Mrs. Johnson, the superin-
tendent of the Woman's Reformatory Prison, was perhaps the
WORLD»S FAIR MANAGERS. 139
most successfol exhibit from any State or country in this de-
partment, in combining an appeal to the popular attention and
understanding with the setting forth of the essential principle
upon which the institution is carried on.
THE CENTRAL EXHIBIT.
The main work of the committee was in the preparation of
the central exhibit, showing our system of correction and of
public relief, and giving a bird's-eye view of the correctional
work of the State and of the charitable work, both public and
private, and also of the condition of the classes dealt with.
How far the committee was successful in this work so far as
effectiveness of presentation and the importance of the ques-
tions dealt with is concerned can be judged by an examination
of the exhibit. This central exhibit contained : —
Eight maps of the State, showing the distribution of institu-
tions, public or private, of savings banks and savings, of co-
operative banks, of crime, pauperism, the tramps, and of
associated charities societies, and showing the policy of the
several towns in giving outdoor relief.
One hundred and twelve charts, giving such other facts and
statistics as seemed, after most careful consultation with ex-
perts of all sorts, to be the most interesting and important
among those obtainable ; a very complete account, supple-
mented by statistics, of the entire work of the Department of
Outdoor Poor of the State Board of Lunacy and Charity.
If special subjects are to be mentioned, it may be said that
the greatest stress was laid upon the question of outdoor relief
and upon the question of the boarding out of the children in
the charge of the State.
In selecting and presenting these subjects no attempt was
made to glorify the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It was
felt that the State could very well afford to stand on its own
140 KBPORT OF BOABD OF
merits, and that the statistics could be given their fall valae
only by being selected and compiled with a sole eye, first, to
what was true, and, second, to what was interesting and im-
portant.
A question of essential importance in judging the value of
the exhibit is as to the accuracy of the facts presented, and
this question cannot be judged without a knowledge of the
sources from which they were drawn and the care with which
those sources were used. The facts were gathered from the
various reports of the State Board of Lunacy and Charity, the
Prison Commission, the reports of the larger public institutions,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the reports of the Savings Bank
Commissioners, and from other printed sources, and, where
necessary, by sending the postal cards above mentioned. The
statistics collected by the latter method of sending postal cards
cannot in all cases be considered of great value. In regard to
the public statistics so obtained, they are believed to be accu-
rate ; but in regard to private institutions the statistics remained
incomplete, and are probably not wholly correct. It is thought
that the remaining statistics are as correct as they could be
made. Experts were consulted both within and outside the
public departments and institutions, and in every case in which
the statistics seemed likely to be misleading or erroneous the
matter was carefully investigated. In a large number of cases
the figures in the reports were not used, as not being sufficiently
correct, and a great deal of labor was expended in getting at
the facts more accurately.
Another point which will not appear to those who did not
attend the Exposition is the care that was taken in making the
exhibit attractive. Much time and thought was spent upon
the apparently trivial but really important matter of the selec-
tion of colors for backgrounds, arrangement of signs, etc.
The more statistical portion of the State's exhibit in this de^
partment, upon which much time and great care were spent,
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGBBS. 141
received great commendation from experts and general and
high praise from all those interested in the subjects to which
they related. Two of those who expressed the highest admira-
tion for the work in Massachusetts in this department were Mr.
Frederick H. Wines, of the United States Bureau of Labor
Statistics, and Mr. Hai*t, secretary of Minnesota State Board
of Charity, who has done so much in producing some sort of
order out of the chaos of the statistics of the various States
upon this subject.
Respectfully submitted,
(Signed) Joseph Lee.
142 BBFOBT OF BOABD OF
MASSACHUSETTS IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS OF
THE EXPOSITION.
Consideration has already been given to exhibits
which, having been made at the expense of the Com-
monwealth, may justly be termed ** State exhibits."
The contributions made by private citizens of Mas-
sachusetts have likewise, surely, a place in a report
having to do with the part which the State played
in the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893.
That the account of such contributions should be
worthy of the enterprise and energy which reflected
so great credit upon the State, the Board invited cer-
tain gentlemen, familiar with the subjects to be treated,
to furnish chapters for this report.
To these the Board invite special attention, for
through them the citizens of the Commonwealth will
be able to form an adequate idea of the value and
extent of exhibits from the State. They surely bear
testimony to the high rank which Massachusetts took
in this great competition between the States of the
Union and foreign governments.
Quality and not quantity was the basis of the work
of preparation in the office of the Board of Managers.
The Exposition of 1893 was not a case which made
necessary the acceptance of any undesirable or undig-
nified exhibit from fear that space would be unoccupied.
WOBLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 143
Bather did it happen that the best and worthiest ex-
hibitor was compelled to accept an allotment which in
many cases proved all too small within which to in-
stall his contribution. Far better was it for the citi-
zen of the State to be impressed with the worth and
value of each exhibit than that he should carry away
with him an impression of quantity alone. This method
the Board believe resulted in exhibits and displays
each one of which reflected credit upon the exhibitor,
bearing testimony to his intelligence and to his perse-
verance, while massed together they surely served to
place the Commonwealth well in the front rank among
her sister States.
144: BEPOBT OF BOABD OF
MASSACHUSETTS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF MACHINERY
AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION.
Bt Mr. F&AirozB B. Galloupb.
The exhibit of MaBsachiisettB in the Department of Ma-
chinery was represented by the application for space from one
hundred and seventy-eight firms and indiyidoals. The appli-
cations were received from thirty-eight cities and towns
throughout the State, those from Boston, as the headquarters
of so many business firms, of course, comprising the largest
number from any single locality. The remaining applications
came principally from the leading manufacturing localities near
the eastern coast, although the western towns of the State were
also represented.
Of the above number of applications, forty-six were not
assigned space for their exhibits, and twenty-six more, al-
though assigned space, did not exliibit. The number of firms
and individuals therefore actually exhibiting was one hundred
and six, of which seventy-nine took awards.
In considering the showing made by Massachusetts firms in
this department, a comprehensive idea can perhaps best be
obtained by dividing the mechanical exhibit into twelve gen-
eral groups, which, arranged alphabetically, are as follows:
{X) Electric welding; (2) machine tools and metal-working
machinery; (3) power-transmission motors and mechanical
apparatus; (4) printing presses; (5) sewing machines; (6)
shoe machinery; (7) steam engines; (8) steam fittings,
pumps and apparatus; (9) the telephone; (10) textile-fab-
ric and clothing-manufacturing machinery; (11) valves, and
(12) woodworking machinery. In all these groups the prin-
cipal industrial establishments of the State were well repre-
sented. In two of them, viz., the telephone and electric
world's FAIB HANAGfiBS. 145
welding, the exhibit of Massachusetts was uniqae. No other
State was, of course, able to show anything in competition with
either the telephone — that institution demonstrated and perma-
nently established as a necessity of modem business methods,
of well-nigh universal use, and of so great public benefit —
or the new and radical invention developed and growing into
general use, the electric welding machine.
Passing over further mention in detail of the telephone, that
wonderful instrument and mechanical device which in the Cen-
tennial Exhibition of the United States in 1876 was first shown
to the world, it may be noted that the electric welding process
is now another unique invention of Massachusetts thought,
also employing the great agent of electricity, and although
having been developed in the form of a practical machine for
several years, yet which was now for the first time shown to
the world at the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893. The
principle of the electric welding machine having been demon-
strated, improvements are being made in details, especially in
the designing of the clamps to hold various forms of work in
the most convenient manner while being welded by the use of
the electric current. These machines and appliances formed
a very interesting and instructive exhibit. A machine for
welding large pipes was shown, requiring an electric current
of 80,000 watts, or equivalent to about one hundred horse
power. This machine will weld, in a few minutes' time, the
ends of iron pipes six inches in diameter. The application of
this process to railroad track construction was shown by speci-
mens of chairs welded directly to the rails, and by a three-way
crossing containing six different welds of about twelve square
inches each in cross-section. A railroad crossing of rolled
steel was shown, welded together so as to form one solid piece.
Also the largest electrical weld ever made was shown, having
a section of forty-eight square inches.
Apart from these remarkable exhibits, the leading groups
146 BBPORT OF BOABD OF
may be stated as those of shoe machinery and machine tools
and metal-working machinery. The exhibit of shoe machinery
was the product of over thirty manufacturers. Each of a score
of processes in the manufacture of boots and shoes was repre-
sented by machines of Massachusetts firms. These included
the only set of hide-working machinery shown. A duplex hide
worker was shown that will simultaneously flesh and unhair, or
do either separately, as efficiently as any other machine will do
it at two operations. Hard skins, or skins in the batch, can
be worked without taking them out of the machine and rehand-
ling. An improved slating machine will slate 1,500 to 2,000
skins per day. Machines for all branches of leather finishing,
such as graining, slating, glazing and pebbling, were shown.
For leather measuring two forms of machines were exhibited.
The skiving of the edges of leather was done by a machine
shown. Another machine for folding the edges of shoe vamps
or quarters has become a standard among shoe manufacturers.
It turns the edges of leather and cloth for vamps or linings of
shoes with great perfection, producing a better finished and
fitted shoe than could otherwise be made, and is in use through-
out the country as well as abroad.
In the next process the sewing machines continue the manu-
facture. A closing and seaming machine is fitted with a safe
elastic stitch made with two threads, for the purpose of pro-
ducing strength and elasticity, in the direction of the length of
the seam. It may be made as safe when formed from cotton
threads as one made from more expensive silk or other threads,
as each stitch is fastened and independent. On a three-thread
vamping machine, with silk or cotton thread, an operator can
do 250 pairs per day, twenty stitches to the inch. A three-row
machine uses three needles and two under threads and makes
the safe elastic stitch which avoids all friction at the crossing
of the upper and under threads, and prevents them from loos-
ening during the wear of the shoe. The seam is pliable, the
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 147
Btitch of the leather, as in lasting, not causing it to break, and,
owing to the manner in which the upper thread is drawn below
the surface of the leather, all danger of the ripping of the
vamps by. friction and chafing or by wearing off the tops of
stitches is avoided. Work requiring a zigzag stitch or over-
edge seaming is done by an overseaming machine forming a
stitch of the same characteristic and which can be run at a high
rate of speed, for ornamental shoe linings and on all kinds of
cloth and leather materials. The thread is taken directly from
spools, without necessitating the winding on bobbins.
Machines which cut the fabric, work and finish button-holes
complete, were exhibited, which, with the improvements made
botb in the construction of the machines and in the work done,
makes the exhibit in this branch of shoe machinery noteworthy.
On one of these machines the number of button-holes completed
by a single operator was 10,010 in a period of nine hours and
fifty minutes' time. A button-sewing machine was also ex-
hibited. Other machines space and punch the holes and put
in the eyelets. A tubular rivet-and-stud power machine was
shown that puts hooks and studs in shoes at the rate of ninety
a minute. Another machine is a sole moulder that shapes the
bottom. A sewing machine, with lock stitch, sews the out-
soles and is used for welt sewing or inseaming.
Of lasting machines several were exhibited. One of these
takes the stretch out of the leather and lasts all kinds, sewed,
nailed or pegged. By another method the shoe is lasted on a
jack, the upper being drawn over with the pinchers, as in hand
lasting. On bringing the shoe upon the Jack in contact with
the machine the mechanism is automatically started, which
drives the tacks. The jack is so arranged with compound
motions that each portion of the shoe may be turned so that
the tack can be driven to best advantage.
There was also shown an entire system of manufacturing
shoes by machinery. Machines sew the welt, using both a
148 BBPOBT OF BOARD OF
carved awl and needle, the process following closely the hand
method. The thread passes through hot wax in a cylinder, at
the rear. The outsole is laid with cement, trimmed to the shoe,
a channel being cut at the same time. The outsole is then
fastened to the welt by a rapid stitcher, as in hand-sewed
shoes. Upon one machine a horn is used having a shape
which permits it to enter any shoe, and the sewing is done
without changing the shape of the shoe or causing it to
wrinkle. The thread is waxed by running through hot wax,
and a device returns the surplus to the reservoir without
waste and causing the sewing to be perfect. Other improve-
ments for heating the wax and in the rotary whirl attach-
ment prevent breakage of parts and produce perfect work.
The machine may be so speeded that expert operators can
sew about nine hundred pairs per day. Old and new and
improved rapid metallic screw fasteners and wire grip machines
were shown ; also channel flap laying and beating-out machines.
By an automatic leveller the ball of the shoe can be made
with absolute uniformity.
Several heel nailing and trimming machines were exhibited.
A slugging machine was shown which drives sixty-five kinds
of slugs, of solid steel or brass wire ; an automatic clinch
nailing machine, which does more varied kinds of work than
almost any other. The nails are driven and clinched at the
rate of three hundred per minute. Another machine com-
presses, attaches and trims the heel. Edge trimming, edge
setting and sand-papering machines were shown. Buffing,
burnishing and bottom polishing, upper cleaning and mono-
gram machines complete the work, with the minimum of
handling.
Twin treeing machines for holding boots without cansing
wrinkling in the shank, with a full set of treeing tools of
wood, glass and metal sticks, were exhibited. The shoe
machinery showed progress, improvement and efficiency both
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGBRS. 149
in construction, speed and work, and the exhibit shows
Massachusetts to be still in the lead in this branch of
industry. The inventors of the State have produced most
of the machinery used in every special branch of the manu-
facture of shoes, and set the example to those in other parts
of the country where the manufacture is carried on, of how
to best attain the adaptation of machinery to the varied and
often intricate and difficult processes required in this branch
of manufacture.
Machine tools and metal working machinery form the
leading exhibit from the State next to that of shoe machin-
ery, both in the extent and variety of the mechanical in-
dustries represented. In emery wheels was exhibited perhaps
the largest and most complete assortment ever shown. Some
fifty thousand wheels were in exhibit, varying in size from
one-eighth inch to thirty-six inches in diameter and from
one-thirty-second inch to six inches in thickness. They
were of every conceivable shape and for eveiy purpose.
Machines in great variety were shown in operation, for all
purposes of grinding, edge and surface grinding, shaping,
exterior and interior work and with single and double wheels.
An universal cutter and tool grinder will grind cutters of
all kinds, mill reamers, twist drills, taps, lathe and planer
tools, and, indeed, every tool used in the machinery business.
With each machine is supplied eighteen wheels, of different
shapes, which are mounted on an iron collet, which is drawn
into a taper protecting spindle that prevents all chance for
emery to get to the spindle or into the bearings, and causes
the wheel to run perfectly true, although the wheels are
often changed. A friction countershaft connects with the
grinder, arranged with five changes of speed. For small
internal grinding a speed of 20,000 revolutions per minute
can be obtained. Elastic wheels were shown in regular use,
which were superior for saws, and would cut free, without
case hardening.
150 REPORT OF BOARD OF
In twist drills a fine display of regular drills, reamers,
etc., was made. Special drills were made with a copper
tabe soldered into a small spiral groove, the object of the
tube being to force the oil through to the point of the
drill. Some very lai^e three-grooved reamers, used in cored
holes, were supplied with three spiral grooves, instead of two
as in twist drills, in the middle of the outside flat of which
was milled a shallow groove which divided the outside bear-
ing surface into six parts, without circular clearance or
backing of¥. These tools are found to work well in cored
or rough-drilled holes. Other drills have a hole drilled
crosswise through them, from one groove to the other, where
the grooves join the shank. This hole is connected with a
hole passing lengthwise through the center of the shank.
The shank of this drill is short and lai^e, and is threaded
externally to fit the end of a steel tube forming the shank
proper. The oil for lubrication passes through the tube and
the chips pass through the holes in the drill and out through
the tube. This drill is used for deep-hole drilling. Milling
cutters are also shown, made in two parts, which interlock,
and are packed apart by washers to maintain the size.
A very large display of general machine tools was made,
comprising an automatic cam-cutting machine ; four universal
milling machines ; two automatic gear cutters ; six plain
milling machines and a cutter grinder ; a 15-inch turret lathe,
with automatic chuck; five cutting-off machines for 2 and 6
inch stock; an universal grinder; eight lathes from 14 to 22
inches swing ; a 26-inch planer ; a 26-inch lathe ; six upright
drill presses; five lathes, and a radical drill press. One of
the milling machines can take a cut of cast iron one-six-
teenth inch deep and 14 inches wide at the rate of 14 inches
per minute. A special vise is used with these machines,
which can be instantly adjusted to take work of any size
from one-fourth inch to five feet, holding the work close to
WORLD'S PAIR 3iANAGBRS. 161
the platen. A new feature in a lathe was the use of plain
pulleys for the feed belt and three pairs of gears inside the
head, instead of the usual feed cane, for driving the stud
and lead screw. The driving gear can be moved along a
shaft upon a feather so as to drive any one of the spur
gears, thus quickly changing the pitch of screws to be cut
without changing the train of gearing.
Peculiar and ingenious machines for rolling balls, cylinders,
screws and a variety of irregular shapes from the hot metal
were exhibited. A full set of reciprocating tools, operated by
electricity, for drilling, cutting, molding and carving all kinds
of stone, was shown, and for riveting boilers and calking
ships. Also tools used in watch making were exhibited.
In textile machinery, full sets of machinery were exhibited
in operation, special notice of which is passed over in this
place.
Power-transmission apparatus was represented by roils of
seamless-stitched, f rictioned-surface rubber and leather belting
and by friction cane countershafting, an apparatus by which
machines, such as grinders, electric motors, etc., may be
driven direct from the engine shaft or other motor without
the use of the ordinary belts.
Steam engines from the manufacturers of the State were
also shown.
In the groups of steam fittings and apparatus may be
mentioned steam pumps; also inspirators and ejectors in
operation for the supplying of water to locomotive and sta-
tionary boilers; also metallic packings. A beautifully fin-
ished assortment of nickel-plated steam and water fittings
was exhibited. Cast-iron fittings, valves and an extensive
variety of expansion joints were displayed; also wrenches
and a tapping machine for tapping street mains from 4 to
24 inches in diameter while under pressure. Fire hydrants
and feed-water heaters, condensers, etc., were also shown.
162 BEFOBT OF BOABD OF
Of valves there were a great variety of pop and otiier
safety valves, for all kinds of boilers ; noiseless safety valves
for locomotive and marine boilers, relief valves for pumps
and stand-pipes, and pressure and vacuum gauges. Steam
engine indicators were exhibited ; also a feed-water regulator
used in connection with a pump governor. This device
nAintains automatically the desired height of water in a
steam boiler. The difference in expansion between a brass
pipe and an iron rod operates to either start or stop the
steam pump.
A large number of valves, gates and cocks, in brass and
nickel, were shown, from small to very large sizes, and
straightway water and steam valves. Special features of
these were renewable bronze seats, the outside screw and
yoke, the by-pass arrangement, the ribbing of the body of
the valve, to prevent its being affected by the expansion, in
pipe lines, and a self-packing featui*e on the spindle by
means of which the valve may be packed when open, with
pressure on. Flanges were shown, plain and tongued and
grooved, and either bolted to valve or as flange unions.
Valves for use as boiler stop valves and for both high and
low pressure were shown in actual use. The sizes varied
from one-fourth inch to 48 inches, the largest shown being
a 24-inch valve. Ammonia valves for mechanical refrigera-
tion were also exhibited. The standani flanges are now
being chased, instead of tapped, to obtain a more perfect
thread. For plain packing they have a raised surface inside
the bolt holes; other flanges are grooved for packing. The
heavy valves show an improvement in quantity and disposi-
tion of metal to resist the constantly increasing pressure to
which modem practice tends.
The woodworking machines f oi*med another important class.
Some fifteen of these were exhibited, among them a new
double surfacer and sizer for planing all kinds of bill timber
WORLD'S FAm MANAGEBS. 153
perfectly square, bradding heavy girders and a variety of mill-
work. Two pieces may be dressed at once and on three sides
each, by using a center-guide. The machine can be changed
while running by means of a power hoist, so that timber of
different sizes can be planed without sorting, or two pieces of
different thickness run through at the same time. Other ma-
chines comprised an automatic floor board boring machine, a
88-inch band-saw machine, a heavy pattern self-feeding saw
table, double iron adjustable saw table, a circular resawing
machine, an improved jointing and facing machine, new cab-
inet surface planer and a four-roll molding machine. A 24-
inch single shop surf acer is especially adapted for a strong feed
and fine finish. The bed moves up and down by means of ele-
vating screws of large diameter, upon gibbed ways arranged to
give great steadiness. A new automatic knife grinder, with
power feed, for wet or dry grinding, is very compact, has an
absolutely straight and true edge and runs without jar.
The electrical forging of metals formed a most novel and
comprehensive exhibit. Appliances for forging, welding, roll-
ing, brazing and for rolling balls and taper pins were shown in
regular operation, all being operated by an electric motor. A
large drop forge was used for making horseshoes. A large
electric heater, having several metal holders, is used for heating
the bare and for welding tubes or pipes. Pieces of different
diameters and lengths are heated at the same time, the heater
dividing the current automatically by a governing rheostat, or
regulator. Iron, steel or copper can be heated easily and
quickly. Four holders, close to the rolling machine, keep the
operator supplied with heated rods. The heat is comparatively
mild and the portions beyond the immediate effect of the elec-
tric current are not heated, and the metal thus heated is not
oxidized or burned. A poitable heating apparatus is used for
heating rivets for building construction, or for use in isolated
places. A pail containing water is connected with a conductor
164 RKPOBT OF BOABD OF
of an electric corrent, while a pair of tongs is connected with
the other pole. The current may be obtained from an electric-
light or trolley wire, or other sonrce of electrical enei^. On
dipping a piece of metal held by the tongs in the water, the cir-
cuit is completed and the metal at once heats, the action being
quite rapid. It may be melted in this manner, and iron or
steel is not injured in the process, as a surrounding jacket of
hydrogen is generated and envelops the metal, which protects
the metal from the action of the oxygen. This exhibit received
a medal and diploma for originality, rapidity in placing and
removing the metal to be heated and adjusting the heating
devices to varying sizes, shapes and lengths, and for original
and superior construction and apparatus.
Printing presses and sewing machines were represented by
manufacturers of the State.
From what has preceded it has been shown that the mechan-
ical industries of the State are creditable and compare favor-
ably with those of any other State, and in several novel and
important particulars are unique and exclusive in their mechan-
ical products among the exhibits.
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 155
MASSACHUSETTS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICITY
AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION.
Bt William A. Hoybt.
At the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876 the
electrical exhibits were not sufficiently numerous nor of suf-
ficient importance to warrant a separate department, and the
single item of importance in the development of the electrical
industry as connected with that exhibition is the fact that there
the speaking electric telephone was first publicly shown. Eight
years later, in 1884, an exhibition was held in Philadelphia
devoted exclusively to electricity. The progress in the mean-
time had been marvellous. Here were shown the electric
light, both arc and incandescent, the telephone in operation
with a working central office, dynamos of many forms, motors,
incipient street railway operated by electricity, multiplex sys-
tems of telegraphy, storage batteries, and many other ingenious
and interesting applications of electricity, all practically new.
It was commonly supposed that the nine years between 1884
and 1893 had produced an equal crop of things new and start-
ling in the electrical field that would burst upon the world at
the World's Columbian Exposition, but such did not prove to
be the fact. Great improvements had, during that period,
been made in all directions; electric street railways, shown
in embryo in 1884, came into general use during the period
named ; in electric lighting great progress had been made, and
also in electric power for many purposes ; storage batteries
had come into use to a limited extent for special purposes, and
the telephone had been vastly improved and was working over
distances never dreamed of in the earlier days. Still, with
some few exceptions, notably electric welding and forging,
and the use of electricity for the development of heat, the
156 KEPOBT OF BOARD OF
World's Fair had, in the Department of Electricity, less to
show in the way of absolute novelty than was generally looked
for.
From the United States there were, in aU, four hundred and
seventy-eight exhibits. In many instances the same exhibitor
made several exhibits, so that this number greatly exceeds the
total number of United States exhibitors. The number of
exhibitors from Massachusetts was nineteen, and of this num-
ber several had exhibits which were not in the full sense elec-
trical, being in the nature of supplies required and used in
electrical industries. Of this sort were exhibits of wire, of
iron poles for carrying wires and cables, of specially designed
trucks for electric cars, and of pumps operated by electric
wire.
But while the number of exhibits in the Electrical Depart-
ment from Massachusetts was relatively small, they included
some of the most important. That made by the American
Bell Telephone Company, a Massachusetts corporation, which
has been built upon inventions made in Massachusetts, was
one of the most notable. It was installed in a beautiful build-
ing of Greek design, admirably adapted for the purpose.
Here was shown a complete set of instruments, from the
earliest beginnings of the art, through all the stages of develop-
ment down to the perfected instruments of the present time.
Here also were to be seen in actual commercial operation a
complete central office equipped with the latest and most im-
proved switchboard, with all the necessary auxiliaiy apparatus :
a long-distance station, where opportunity was given the public
to test the line to New York ; diagrams and maps showing the
growth and present state of the business, and many interesting
specialties in the way of the telephone use with which the pub-
lic at large is not generally familiar.
The General Electric Company of New York, which made
perhaps the largest exhibit in the building. Included that of
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 167
what was formerly the Thomson-Houston Company, whose
works are at Lynn, in this State. The two companies having
combined, the exhibit of machines and instruments made in
Lynn was not kept apart, and cannot therefore be separately
described. But those who took the trouble to examine care-
fully found that a generous proportion of all that were shown
came from Massachusetts.
The Electric Welding Company, a Massachusetts enterprise,
based upon the inventions of Professor Thompson, a citizen of
this State, made a most interesting and creditable exhibit,
showing their machines in operation. As this was the first
great exhibition at which this new and surprising process had
been shown, it attracted very general attention.
The same may be said of the exhibit of the Electric Forging
Company, also a Massachusetts enterprise. Every afternoon
crowds could be seen gather round the novel forge, where the
■piece of iron to be shaped upon the anvil, instead of being put
into the fire, was simply dipped in what appeared to be a pail
of cold water, where it was in an instant brought to a white
heat.
In the group which included heating and cooking this State
was well represented.
But, in a larger and broader way, Massachusetts and what
she has done for electrical science and electrical industries was
very much in evidence. At the main entrance of the Electric-
ity Building was a statue of one of her most distinguished
sons, drawing the lightning from the clouds. Franklin had, as
he deser\'ed, the foremost place of honor as one of the earliest
explorers in the electrical field. Nor was it forgotten that to
another son of Massachusetts, Professor Moree, the world
owes the simple yet effective device which has made the enor-
mous development of the telegraph system of the whole world
possible. The exhibit, made by the Western Union Telegraph
Company, of his early experimental instruments was one of the
most interesting and instructive in the department.
168 REPORT OP BOARD OF
There is one man, whose death daring the progress of the
Exhibition was sincerely moamed, of whom a word should be
said. The little exhibit of incandescent lights and of an
operative electric railway model, dating back more than forty
years, was an effective illustration of the fact that a man may
miss the reward of invention by being too far in advance of his
time. Such a man was Moses G. Farmer, to whom the world
is indebted for the first fire-alarm system ever put in operation,
that of the city of Boston, who made many other valuable and
important inventions, but who was always reaching out for
something for which the world was not ready. To the world
at large he is, and will be, but little known, but those who are
familiar with electrical discovery and invention during the
yeara that intervened between 1850 and 1875 will always hold
his name in respected and affectionate remembrance.
WORLD'S 7AIK MANAGERS. 159
MASSACHUSETTS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ETHNOLOGY
AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION.
Bt Miss F. H. Mbad.
It is appropriate, in connection with a report of the part
taken by the State of Massachasetts in the Exposition, to
call attention to the honor conferred upon her by placing
one of her citizens at the head of the Department of Eth-
nology. Prof. F. W. Putnam, a descendant of some of the
oldest families who came from England and settled in Salem,
Mass., in the first half of the seventeenth century, is in
every sense of the word a son of Massachusetts. From his
position as professor of American archaeology in Harvard
University, and from the reputation he has gained by life-
long researches in the natural sciences. Professor Putnam
was chosen to fill the position of chief of the Department of
Ethnology at the time of the very conception of the depart-
ment. It is well that his scientific knowledge is of the
broadest character, as the department over which he was
called to preside far exceeded in scope the title given to it
by the Exposition classification, and included ail the sub-
divisions of anthropology as well as natural history. By
the special request of Professor Putnam, his deparCment
building was named the Anthropological Building, and the
motto ''Man and his TVorks'' was placed over the main
entrance. This was considered the most appropriate term to
cover all the varied exhibits in the building.
As might be expected, this building was the favorite ren-
dezvous for scientists from all parts of the world, and many
were the expressions of wonder and commendation bestowed
upon its contents. Here were many important and interest-
ing exhibits from the S^Ates, from scientists and scientific
160 BBPORT OF BOARD OF
societies, from individuals and from foreign coantries; but
what is of special interest in this connection is the fact that
the State of Massachusetts was very closely connected with
three of the most scientifically important and generally at-
tractive sections in the Anthropological Building.
LABORATORIES OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY.
A large portion of the northern gallery was occupied by
the Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, which was univer-
sally pronounced to be remarkably complete and scientific in
its character. While this laboratory contained contributions
from scientists and scientific institutions the world over,
Massachusetts, through her educational institutions, was the
essential factor. When the plan of this laboratory was first
conceived, Professor Putnam selected Dr. Franz Boas, — at
that time professor of anthropology in Clark University,
Worcester, Mass., — as the most able man to place in special
charge of this whole section. As the plans were gradually
developed the laboratory was divided into five sections, an-
thropological laboratory, psychological laboratory, neurologi-
cal laboratory, development room and the anthropological
library. One entire room in this section was occupied by
the exhibit of the Hemenway Gymnasium of Harvard Uni-
versity, in charge of Dr. D. H. Sargent, showing researches
in the anthropometry of college students. The composite
statues made under Dr. Sargent's direction, from a long
series of measurements upon students, representing the typical
or average American student, male and female, formed the
chief objects of interest and attraction in this room. Har-
vard College also exhibited psychological apparatus and photo-
graphs of laboratory equipment. The Harvard Medical School,
through Dr. Bowditch, exhibited anthropometric instruments,
the results of investigations on the growth of chOdren in
WORLD*S I'AIB MANAGBBS. 161
Boston, Bcieutific apparatus, and a series of large composite
photographs. Dr. W. F. Whitney was also an exhibitor.
The Peabody Museum at Harvard, of which the chief of the
department is and has been for twenty years the curator,
contributed anthropological instruments, skeletons of races,
crania, and casts of heads of Indians. Dr. H. Nichols showed
optical apparatus ; Dr. C. W. Fitz, psychological apparatus ;
and Dr. Hugo Munsterberg exhibited Aeby's wire model of
the brain.
Clark University was also well represented in the Laboratory
of Physical Anthropology. In the division of Neurology was
the exhibit of Dr. C. F. Hodges, which consisted of charts
illustrating fatigue of the nerve cells. In the division of
Anthropology was the large and valuable collection of skulls
from North America, New Guinea and the Sandwich Islands,
belonging to Dr. Franz Boas ; also the important statistics
collected and tabulated by Dr. G. M. West on the growth
and development of children in Worcester, Mass. Here also
were the charts and diagrams illustrating the anthropometry of
the North American Indians, based upon the measurements of
17,000 individuals taken by the seventy volunteer assistants
who were sent out by Professor Putnam to gather these sta-
tistics among the various Indian tribes of North America.
Amherst College contributed to the laboratories by the ex-
hibit of Prof. £. Hitchcock, which consisted of anthropometric
charts showing the effect of physical culture upon the growth of
students in Amherst College. Wellesley College was repre-
sented by photographs of laboratory equipment, and also by
the important exhibit of Miss M. Anna Wood, who contributed
anthropometric studies from the Gymnasium of Wellesley Col-
lege. Smith College, of Northampton, Mass., was an exhibitor,
through Prof. J. H. Pillsbury, in the division of Psychology.
The State Board of Health of Massachusetts contributed an
exhibit of anthropometric instruments and statistics.
162 RBPOBT OV BOABD OF
The Boston Normal School of Gymnastics showed diagrams
and instruments.
In the division of Psychology Dr. B. J. Jeffries of Boston
exhibited optical apparatus, and Richie & Sons of Brookline
showed scientific instruments.
From the foregoing statements it will be seen that Massa-
chusetts has reason to be proud of the active pai*t taken by her
institutions and her cultured sons and daughters in this most
purely and severely scientific section in the Anthropological
Building.
CENTRAL AMERICAN SECT/ON.
The Central American section was one of exceeding Interest
and importance to students of Central American archaeology
on account of the vast amount of new material exhibited there.
The ancient ruined cities of Yucatan and Honduras, with
their massive stone structures, symbolic sculptures and hiero-
glyphic incriptions, were extensively represented. Fac-simiJe
reproductions, made from the molds taken during two seasons'
exploration by the Peabody Museum Honduras Expedition of
the stone idols or monoliths, stone heads and bands of hiero-
glyphs in Copan and Quirigua, occupied a prominent position
in the section. Professor Putnam, director of these expedi-
tions, appointed as the acting head of the first year's expedi-
tion to Copan Mr. Marshall H. Saville, a student assistant
in the Peabody Museum ; and the second year, Mr. John Gr.
Owens, a student in Professor Putnam's department of the
Harvard Graduate School, was appointed to take charge ; and
it is sad to report that this promising young scientist lost his
life by fever while on this expedition.
The recent work in Yucatan by Mr. E. H. Thompson, a
Massachusetts man and United States Consul to Merida, acting
as assistant to Professor Putnam and the Peabody Museum,
was shown partly within and partly outside the Anthropological
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 163
Building. Ten thousand square feet of molds were taken by
the expedition under his charge, during fourteen months of
hard labor and serious risk of life in the dense, malarial jungles
of Yucatan. The principal sections chosen as characteristic
examples of the architecture and sculpture of these magnificent
ruined temples were the ^' Portal of Lebna," with dimensions
of twenty-five feet in height and forty feet in width; ''The
Straight Arch of Uxmal," twenty-seven feet high and twenty-
two feet wide ; the famous fa9ade of the '' Serpent House ; "
and three different sections from the '' House of Nuns." Full-
size reproductions of these sections were made in staff and
erected on the grounds just north of the Anthropological Build-
ing. Every one who visited the Exposition will recall the
weird effect produced on the imagination by these old monu-
ments of an unknown past standing in stately grandeur amidst
all the magnificence and beauty that landscape art and archi-
tecture of to-day could devise.
A collection of 162 large photographs taken by the Peabody
Museum expeditions, the famous Chamay casts, and the well-
known Maudsley photographs, as well as casts from Guatemala
contributed by the Berlin Museum, helped to make this section
an inexhaustible store of treasures to the student and a source
of wonder and delight to all.
SOUTH AMERICAN SECTION.
Another large and extremely popular section in which Massa-
chusetts was an important factor was that of South America.
One division of this section was known as the department
exhibit from South America. This was wholly independent of
the various oflScial exhibits from South America, and was
brought together by original work and exploration carried on
under Professor Putnam's direction. These collections occu-
pied about 10,000 square feet in the Anthropological Building
164 REPORT OF BOARD OF
and comprised a fine display of ethnological and archffiological
material from Peru, Chili, Bolivia, the Island of La Plata and
the region of the Upper Paraguay, as well as full sets of gar-
ments and a large number of pottery vessels used by the
Quichaus of the interior of Peru. Perhaps the most popular
exhibit in the whole building was one feature of this division,
known as the "An^on Graveyard." Mr. G. A. Dorsey, a stu-
dent in Professor Putnam's department of the Harvard Grad-
uate School, was the man whom Professor Putnam chose to
collect the larger part of this material from South America, and
he was in charge of the entire South American section in the
building. Mr. Dorsey conceived the plan of reproducing a
portion of the old burial place at An9on to show the method of
burial at that place, where one hundred graves were opened
under his direction. This plan was carried out by setting up
the mummies in a natural position in a foundation of sand and
surrounding them with the objects found with them in the
graves, such as pots of beans, bags of peanuts, pottery vessels,
work baskets furnished with materials for sewing, and various
other objects from which we learn the customs of these early
peoples of Peru. This unique exhibit was enclosed by a railing
which was always surrounded by a crowd of curious and inter-
ested visitors.
In addition to the part taken by Massachusetts in these three
large sections of the department, there were several Individual
exhibits which are worthy of mention as belonging to the
citizens of the Commonwealth.
Dr. Franz Boas has already been mentioned in connection
with the section of Physical Anthropology, but in addition to
this he was chosen by Professor Putnam to superintend the
collecting of the large and interesting exhibit from the north-
west coast of America which was to be seen in the Anthropo-
logical Building. This collection represented the several tribes
of native peoples of British Columbia, and included many
WOHLD'S FAIR MAKAGBBS. 165
curious masks, idols and other objects of religious significance,
as well as totem poles, with their symbolic carving, native
canoes, wearing apparel and articles of household use. Dr.
Boas was also instrumental in bringing the fourteen Quackuhl
Indians from Vancouver Island. These Indians furnished the
ethnologists a store of interest, and were a great attraction to
the visitors by their strange songs, dances and ceremonies,
which were carried on each day in the native houses and occa-
sionally in the evening on an illuminated float in the lagoon.
Mr. C. C. Willoughby, acting as assistant in the Peabody
Museum, carried on a veiy thorough and scientific exploration,
during the seasons of 1891-2, in the Penobscot valley in Maine.
The results of the exploration of one of these burial places
were displayed in the Anthropological Building, and those of
another furnished the material of the Peabody Museum exhibit
in the education section of the Liberal Arts Building. Both of
these collections were artistically arranged by Mr. Willoughby
with the idea of illustrating the Peabody Museum method of
exploration.
Miss Alice C. Fletcher, holder of the Thaw Fellowship in
the Peabody Museum, furnished ethnological material ftom
certain Indian tribes, and also exhibited her work on Indian
music, which represents the results of her twelve years' study
on this subject among the Indians.
Zelia Nuttall, honorary assistant in the Peabody Museum,
brought together a collection of Mexican archaeology for the
department. This consisted chiefly of the large charts illus-
trating her reproduction of the ancient Mexican calendar sys-
tem, painted shields, and photographic reproductions of a
portion of Sahagun's manuscript.
The Massachusetts members on the regular staff of assist-
ants in the Department of Ethnology were : Dr. Franz Boas of
Worcester, chief assistant; Miss F. H. Mead of Cambridge,
secretary; Mrs. S. F. Fletcher of Cambridge, stenographer
166 KBPOBT OF BOABD OP
and clerical assistant ; Mr. G. A. Dorsey of Cambridge, saper-
intendent of the Section of South American Ethnology and
Archseology ; Dr. G. M. West of Worcester, assistant in the
Laboratory of Physical Anthropology.
In addition to these regular assistants, several young men
from among the students of Harvard and Clark Universities
were sent out by Professor Putnam to collect anthropological
statistics and ethnological material from the different Indian
tribes during the seasons of 1891-2.
It must be remembered in reading the foregoing statements
that this is not intended as a report on the Department of
Ethnology, but simply as a brief summary of that portion with
which Massachusetts was closely connected.
VrORLD'B 7AIB MANAGBBS. 167
MASSACHUSETTS IN THE TEXTILE EXHIBITS AT THE
WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION.
Bt Henkt G. Kittredob of Boston.
MassachiiBetts has always shown herself willing and ready to
contribate her share in any demonstration of a State, national
or international character that will redound to her own or to
the national industrial advancement. Her policy has been
always liberal and patriotic, and her people have been inspired
with her greatness. In nothing is she more conspicuous than in
her mechanical industries and in the perfectness of her factory
system. In these particulars she is the acknowledged leader
among the States. The spirit of her enterprise was manifest
in these particulars to a very marked degree at the World's
Columbian Exposition, and no more so than in her textile
exhibits, especially woollen and cotton. In the amount of
capital invested in these two industries she stands at the head
of all the States. Over $210,000,000 are thus invested, or
over thirty per cent, of the total capital invested in these indus-
tries in the United States.
In the silk manufacturing industry Massachusetts does not
occupy an advanced position, and in this particular she is
behind New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Connecticut.
The larger portion of the silk manufactures of the State is the
product of mills located in the valley of the Connecticut River.
At least two-thirds of the capital invested in the manufacture
of silk in Massachusetts is in the Connecticut valley. Over
eighty-six per cent, of the machine twist and sewing silk made
in the United States is the product of Connecticut and Massa-
chusetts mills, and of this product the latter produce nearly
thirty-seven per cent. ^ Such being the case, it was quite con-
sistent with Massachusetts' silk exhibit at the World's Fair
168 RBPORT OF BOABD OF
that it should be conspicaous for the excellence of its display
in these goods. There were only four silk-goods exhibits at
Chicago from Massachasetts, but these represented invested
capital to the extent of $1,850,000, or almost exactly one-half
of the capital so invested in the State. No other State made
a larger proportional representation of its silk manafactare.
Two of these exhibits were of mills making an international
exhibit for the first time, and two were of mills that were
represented at the Philadelphia Exposition of 1876. These
latter were more or less significant of the progress in the
variety of goods made between 1876 and 1893. At Phila-
delphia the silk exhibit of Massachusetts consisted wholly of
machine twist, sewing, embroidery, saddlers' and button-hole
silk ; while at Chicago, in addition to these, were to be seen
silks for linings, serges, surahs, satins, dress silk, braids, mit-
tens, hosiery and underwear. In many of these new products
this State has taken an advanced position compared with other
States, with much promise of continuing improvement. The
silk exhibit of Massachusetts at Chicago was entitled to great
praise, especially for its machine twist and sewing silks.
Massachusetts had no jute or kindred exhibit at Chicago and
only one linen exhibit, and that consisted of crash. The mill
making this exhibit was also represented with the same kind of
product at Philadelphia in 1876.
There were twenty-one different manufacturing establish-
ments in Massachusetts making exhibits of cotton manufacture
at the World's Fair, having a spinning capacity of 1,299,148
spindles, or about nineteen per cent, of the total cotton-spin-
ning capacity of the State. The exhibits represented goods
whose annual production amounted to not far from $20,000,000.
The character of Massachusetts' cotton goods exhibit was fully
as rich as that made at Philadelphia in 1876, but it was not so
extensive. In 1876 the mills of the State made exhibits repre-
senting the produce of 2,164,082 spindles, or about fifty-six
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 169
per cent, of the total Bpinning capacity of the State at that
time. Forty-seven different establishments were thos repre-
sented at the Exposition of 1876, to less than half that number
at the Exposition of 1893. There was less interest taken in
the latter than in the former owing to varioos reasons, the most
potent of which was the lack of any concert of action. It was
urged upon manufacturers by the Massachusetts Commission
for the World's Columbian Exposition that they appoint a
special committee to advise and take charge of exhibits of this
kind, but the suggestion was not favorably received, with the
consequence that there was not as full a representation of the
State's cotton manufacture as there should have been. Thus
every exhibitor at the Chicago exposition acted individaally,
according to his own ideas of what was wanted. Many manu-
facturers were disinclined to make a display of their products
with the limited space allowed them by the Exposition authori-
ties. They were, however, as liberally treated as possible in
this respect. Eleven of those exhibiting at the Chicago expo-
sition exhibited at Philadelphia in 1876. In the latter year
they represented the product of 741,536 spindles, while in 1893
they represented the product of 1,025,432 spindles, or an
increased productive capacity of 283,896 spindles. Among
the cotton-goods exhibitors at the World's Fair was a concern,
for the first time appearing in an exhibition of this kind, with
an exhibit of fabrics quilted by a knitting process. This ex-
hibit was not with the general groap of cotton manufactures,
but was located in one of the galleries.
A finer line of cotton manufactures was observed at the
Chicago than at the Philadelphia fair. The product of the
combing machine was seen in a number of exhibits either in
the form of yams or fabrics. One mill alone showed the prod-
uct of fifty-six combing machines. Nothing of this kind was
observed at Philadelphia. The mills of Massachusetts have
made great advances in this respect since 1876. The variety
170 RKPOET OP BOABD OP
of yarns at Chicago gave evidence of this. One eetablishment
alone that was represented at the fair manof actares three hun-
dred different varieties of yam, in fineness and quality, to meet
the demands that are made upon it. Among its products may
be enumerated harness twine ; three, four and six ply thread ;
fine yams for plushes ; seine twine ; yam for covering electrical
wire, etc. Several of these are new to American industry.
The principal line of cotton manufactures from Massachu-
setts mills naturally consisted of brown and bleached sheetings
and shirtings. About one-third of the represented producta
was of these goods, — that is to say, these goods represented
the product of about 425,000 spindles. Some of the mills
exhibiting at Chicago had not materially changed their styles of
manufacture since 1876, yet it was an interesting feature in
some instances of mills having turned their attention from one
class of goods, as sheetings, to those of a higher order, requir-
ing greater skill in their production. There were enough cases
of this kind to excite favorable comment of the advancement
that had been made in this particular. Muslins, satteens,
lawns and nainsooks had taken the place of ordinary sheetings ;
and chambrays, challies, llama cloth, velveteens and corduroys
the place of painted and dyed calicoes. There were no exhibits
at Chicago of printing cloths. Fall River mills were repre-
sented in such goods as ginghams, cambric muslins and yams,
but no example of their chief and peculiar product was to be
seen. At Philadelphia nineteen of these mills exhibited fall
lines of printing cloths.
If the cotton manufacturers of Massachusetts did not do
themselves full justice at the World's Fair, for reasons best
known to themselves, the same cannot be said of the woollen
manufacturers, however apathetic some of them seemed to be
to the credit that an exhibit of this kind reflects upon the State
and nation as representative of an enterprising spirit. Twenty-
three wool manufacturing establishments of Massachusetts
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 171
exhibited at Chicago, representing the productive capacity of
about 750 sets of carding machinery. This included about 94
combing machines, equivalent to about 282 sets of cards. At
the 1876 exposition the number of establishments represented
was 17 and the number of sets about 500. Only five of the
mills that exhibited in 1876 exhibited in 1893, and the general
character of the goods displayed by them was about the same in
both instances. In the meantime, however, marked progress
had been made in the style, quality and finish of the goods pro-
duced. It was particularly noticed that worsted yam had
taken the place of the woollen yarn in the fabrics of 1893 as com-
pared with those of 1876. The contrast was an exemplification
of the advance that had been made in the introduction of the
system of combing in our factories. The elegant fancy cassi-
meres, made from carded wool, of the Bell Air Manufacturing
Company's manufacture, Pittsfield, that equalled the best prod*
net of foreign looms in 1876, were not rivalled in any of the
exhibits in 1893. A fabric made from combed wool usurped
their place. There were some superior cassimeres, however,
made from carded wool, to be seen at Chicago, in various color*
ings and tasteful designs. But most of the goods of this kind
were of medium grade, intended for the masses. The skill dis-
played in their manufacture was very apparent,— quite as much
so as .that seen in some of the higher order of woollen fabrics
which had superior qualities of wool in their favor. Yet the
great points of excellence were chiefly conspicuous in the fab-
rics made from worsted yams. The course of fashion decreed
this, and at no previous exposition was there such a varied and
creditable display of fine American worsted fabrics. Massa-
chusetts did not carry off the palm in these goods for men's
wear, but she bore her part well, and exhibited fabrics that re-
turned good profit to those that manufactured them. There
was money and good dividends in them. At Philadelphia only
two Massachusetts woollen mills showed worsted goods for
men's wear, while at Chicago there were seven.
172 HEPOBT OF BOABD OP
The exhibits of overcoatings, kerseys, beavers, cloakings
and similar fabrics made by Massachusetts mills were, in
many instances, of great excellence, and were adjudged so
in the distribution of awards. Woollens with chinchilla finish,
of different varieties in style and colors, were among the
attractive features of the general display from the State.
An exhibit of curled mohair and wool cloakings made by
one mill was almost incomparable.
Six flannel miUs, with eighty-five sets of machinery, were
represented at Chicago. Most of these goods were of the
ordinary type of flannels, for which there is not that demand
as in former yeais. They represented a class of woollens
that at one time were in great favor, but which have been
superseded very largely by knitted fabrics. They have a
demand, though it is rather on the decline than otherwise.
Massachusetts had no exhibit of knit goods at Chicago,
except one, and that was confined to hosiery. Eider-downs
and that class are excepted. In regard to the flannels, an
exception should be made to the foregoing comments of the
product of one Massachusetts mill, which easily stands first
among the mills of the United States in the fineness and
elegance of its manufacture of flannels, both where wool
alone is used and where silk is used in the warp. Their
superior is not to be found in this or in any foreign
country. They had a record at the Philadelphia exposition
for great perfection of fabrication, and the international
reputation there gained was not lost at the Chicago exposi*
tion. The exhibits of eider-down flannels, so called, was
something entirely new to an American public at an exposi-
tion of this kind. The one exhibit of this kind of a
Massachusetts concern was deserving of high encomium as
providing a class of goods for ladies' and children's wear,
and for purposes where warmth and durability, combined
with gossamer lightness, is desired.
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 173
The finest display of wool felts at the Exposition was made
by a Massachusetts mill. These goods were intended for uphol-
stery, hats, boots, piano purposes, etc. They were in great
variety of colors. In the manufacture of these goods every
improvement in machinery, dyeing and finishing was adopted.
The upholstery and embroidery felts exhibited were made from
carefully selected wool, free from cotton and shoddy, uniform
in quality, colored with fast dyes in more than two hundred and
fifty different shades, and given a lustrous cloth finish. These
felts are ysed for -lambrequins, table and piano covers, school,
tennis and musical instrument bags, millinery, and for covering
desks, card, billiai'd and library tables, counters, etc. They
are made seventy-two inches wide and in pieces about twenty-
three yards in length.
Massachusetts had one exhibit of shawls at Chicago, which
was unsuipassed by anything of the kind to be seen even there.
It consisted of velvet shawls of many varieties, beaver shawls
and woollen long shawls. There were several exhibits from
different mills of such fabrics as meltons, tricots, cheviots and
friezes, manufactured to meet the general demand for goods of
this description.
The line of woollen dress goods exhibited by the mills of
this State was without any decided competition in the Ameri-
can exhibit of woollen goods. Including the manufactures of
Italian cloths, mohair serges, linings, etc., in with dress goods,
and the exhibits were contributed by four of the largest mills
in the State. They were every way superior in point of design,
color and finish. These mills also exhibited similar lines of
goods at Philadelphia, where they carried away the highest
honors for excellence of manufacture. The variety of dress
goods shown is but partially described in the names of Hen-
rietta cloth, iridescent fancies, plaids, whip cords, albatross,
etc.
There were no exhibits at Chicago from any of the carpet
174 BEPORT OF BOABD OF
mills of the State, and but one from all the States in the Union.
This was owing to the inability on the part of the mills to secure
a satisfactory amoant of exhibition space from the exposition
anthorities. In this respect the textile exhibit of Massacha-
setts was inferior to that at Philadelphia, where a handsome
display was made of Brussels, Wiltons, tapestry Brussels,
and two and three ply ingrains, besides rugs and mats.
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 176
MASSACHUS'ETTS IN THE SEVERAL DEPARTMENTS OF
THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION.
By E. C. Hovbt.
It is, of course, manifest that no adequate account of the
many individual exhibits contributed by the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts to the great Department of Manufactures can be
given in a single chapter of this oflQcial report. It is equally
true, however, that such report would be far from complete did
it not attempt to give a rhsume at least of all the exhibits col-
lected as exponents of her great manufacturing industries, the
more especially as a separate chapter has been devoted to her
textile interests. That these latter should be noticed at length,
while the equally important manufactures of paper and of
leather, of watches and of pianos, were ignored, would be an
injustice not to be reconciled with the desire of the Board to
give a just account of the contributions which the State made
to each of the many departments of the Exposition.
The contributions of Massachusetts to the group having to
do with paper and paper-making were, as might well have been
expected, most important. The well-known and justly famed
manufacturers of Berkshire and Hampden counties sent sam-
ples of their product which attested to their superiority and
excellence of finish. A comparison of the number exhibiting
with the number of those to whom the Board of Judges granted
an award may serve to show how commendable these exhibits
proved to be in the minds of this committee of expert exam-
iners.
Closely allied with paper and paper-making are books and
book-making. To this department many of the foremost pub-
lishers of the State sent their exhibits. Though a very inade-
quate space had been assigned to them, they cheerfully accepted
176 REPORT OF BOARD OF
their several aUotments, making use of same in a most artistic
manner. In a dignified and powerful way they told the story
of the contributions which Massachusetts has always made and
is still making to the literature of the country. It was a pleas-
ure indeed to see the interest with which visitors examined and
lingered over these exhibits of mere books.
The contributions of Massachusetts to the display of furni-
ture was by no means large. Indeed, with Chicago situated in
the very midst of the great furniture manufacturing centre of
the country, it was not to be expected that the East would be
a very considerable factor in this special department. Of the
seventy exhibits therein less than one-third went from points
east of Detroit, of which number Massachusetts furnished her
full proportion.
To the enterprise and hearty co-operation of the stone-cutters
and quarry owners of Quincy the citizens of the Ck>mmonwealth
are indebted for an exhibit of granite which was as interesting
as it was beautiful. Consisting as it did of a score or more of
monuments artistically arranged, it attracted very great atten-
tion, pro\'iDg once again the great beauty of the well-known
Quincy granite, its great hardness and its susceptibility of
taking a very high degree of polish.
It is a matter of regret that Attleborough, the seat of Jew-
elry manufacture within the State, did not send her contribu-
tions, that they might have been placed side by side with the
products of the factories of Providence, the rival centre of this
great industry. In this department, to which the latter city
sent nearly ninety per cent, of all the exhibits, Attleborough
had but a meagre representation. To Group 99, however, de-
voted as it was to watches, clocks, etc., Massachusetts sent an
exhibit which, if quality be the measure of superiority, stood
second to none. In their space upon the main aisle of the great
manufacturing building the Waltham Watch Company received
visitors by the thousands, attracted thither by the sight of one
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 177
day's prodact, two thousand finished watches, each ticking
away the minutes and the hours. Added to these there were
to be seen many machines of the greatest delicacy and inge-
nuity, automatically doing the most intricate work, while in a
case by itself was a collection of watches showing the evolution
of that which, though once considered a great luxury, is now
deemed to be an absolute necessity.
In the section devoted to wire and wire goods Massachusetts
was not, when considered numerically, very strong. To offset
this statement, however, it is perhaps only necessary to add
that the Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Company was there
in force, their exhibit in the Manufacturers Building being only
one of many made by this great corporation in the several
buildings of the Exposition. It may perhaps be justly said
that, when consideration is given to their many exhibits, the
contributions from this manufacturing corporation in the city
of Worcester stood second to none.
The same comments apply with equal force to the hardware
section, in which were to be seen the exhibit of shovels, spades,
etc., made by the Oliver Ames Sons Corporation of North
Easton, the contributions of the Atlas Tack Corporation of
Boston, as well as exliibits of light edge and boring tools from
Millbury and from Fiskdale. Here again quantity was not the
one thing desired. The quality of product, though, was surely
worthy of the State, whose citizens had every teason to be
proud of the contributions sent from the Commonwealth.
Most nobly did the great centres of boot and shoe manu-
facture in Massachusetts respond to the invitation to show
their wares in the Exposition. More than one-half of all the
exhibit in this department went from Lynn, Haverhill, Boston,
Amesbury and Rockland. These were displayed in a building
the erection of which was made possible only through the liber-
ality and public spirit of the manufacturers in the West and East,
who raised the funds among themselves with which to put up a
178 KBPORT OF BOABD OF
bnilding to be devoted to exhibits of leather and of its mana-
factores. That the manafactare of boots and shoes has not
entirely left Massachusetts these notable exhibits were evi-
dence. In the exhibit of rubber foot-wear Massachusetts
easily led, those of the American and Boston Companies being
by far the most important in this section, while in the groups
devoted to what may perhaps be termed *^ shoemaker supplies "
the Ck>mmon wealth certainly was second to none.
Such, then, is a reaumey inadequate to be sure, of the con-
tributions from Massachusetts to the great department of man-
ufactures. To these, however, must be added further exhibits
which, although they properly belonged to this same depart-
ment, were nevertheless, under the classification of the Expo-
sition, placed in other buildings.
Carriages and bicycles, steamboats and locomotives are as
surely articles of manufacture as are woollens and cottons and
shoes and paper. These were, however, placed in the Trans-
portation Building. To this building the Commonwealth sent
its full quota of exhibits. The great and important carriage-
making centre of Amesbury was represented by a full collec-
tion of the many kinds of vehicles made in its factories, while
from Boston and other places in the State exhibits of bicycles
were received which stamped the Commonwealth as easily lead-
ing in this new but greatly developed branch of manufacturing.
An interesting display of cars and locomotives was made by
the Old Colony Railroad, which also, by means of models and
pictures, showed the progress and development in the building
and equipment of Sound steamers, as made by the Old Colony
Steamboat Company. Numberless other exhibits were made
by Massachusetts firms in railway appliances, refrigerator cars^
car wheels, etc., showing that the inventors of Massachusetts
are keeping themselves busy and are succeeding in develop-
ing their ideas into articles of use and benefit to the world at
large. A very interesting exhibit was sent to the Transporta-
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS. 179
tion Building by the Essex Institute of Salem. By means of
pictures they were able in a most successful and artistic man-
ner to show the evolution of the sailing vessel, beginning with
the earliest days, when that city was an important factor in the
commerce of the country. In their rooms in Salem the Essex
Institute has a most interesting collection, which has been
made by her citizens, who, by reason of the great number of
voyages to different parts of the globe made by vessels then
owned by Salem merchants, were able to get together a large
number of curious articles of all descriptions from the peo*
pies of many countries. Among these were canoes and boats
used by the natives in far-away climes. A picture of this
museum was singularly appropriate in a department one sec-
tion of which was devoted to methods of transportation in use
now, as well as in days that are past, by all the known peo-
ple of the world.
It was hoped by the Board that a unified exhibit of the fish-
ing interests of the Commonwealth might have been made, to
the end that such collection should have been placed in the
Fisheries Building as a State exhibit. The efforts of the Board
in this direction did not meet with success. Such failure, how-
ever, the Board are glad to report, did not prevent the sending
to Chicago of a collection which worthily represented this very
important industi*y. Occupying the most conspicuous position
in the building devoted to these interests, the city of Glouces-
ter was able, by the use of models, as well as by means of
statistical charts, to emphasize her well-known position in deep-
sea fishing. Her exhibit was not interesting only, but of great
value, in showing the enormous increase in the business, which
well-nigh supports this thriving Cape Ann city. Individual
firms, both of Boston and Cape Ann, supplemented Glouces-
ter's exhibit by sending full and interesting collections of arti-
cles used by and indispensable to those who spend their lives
on the Banks of Newfoundland in hazardous and weary toil.
180 BBPORT OP BOABD OF
In the bureau of Liberal Arts, especially devoted to mosio
and musical instruments, the State of Massachusetts, natu-
rally enough, had an exhibit in every way worthy of this very
important industry, an industry in which a large aggregation
of capital is invested, an industry in which, too, Massachu-
setts was to a large extent the pioneer.
Occupying prominent positions in this section, the manu-
facturers of pianos and organs from the State, not only by a
careful selection of the instruments sent forward but by the
artistic treatment of the spaces severally allotted to them, jus-
tified the expectations of the public. They have reason indeed
to feel satisfied with the conclusions arrived at by the very
painstaking and critical board of judges to whom were referred
for decision the merits of the many instruments on exhibition.
The term '^ pianos and organs*' is used herein to cover all
forms of musical instruments sent from the Commonwealth.
A glance at the appendix will show to what a large propor-
tion of exhibitors in this department awards were finally
granted. It is only fair in this connection to call attention
to the fact that several of those who exhibited did so with
the understanding that their instruments were not to be ex-
amined and passed upon by the board of judges.
The State likewise sent a commendable display to the
group in Liberal Arts having to do with pharmaceutical
preparations, several of the largest and best known firms
making exhibits in every way worthy of their standing and
of distinct credit to the State.
By reason of the industry and enthusiasm of the women of
Boston, and through the courtesy, public spirit and generos-
ity of their several owners, the State has good reason to be
proud of the collection of historic relics which filled the space
in the rotunda of the Grovemment Building specially allotted
to the Commonwealth within which to make a display of
such articles as had peculiar reference to her Revolutionary
WOBLD'S 7AIB MANAGERS. 181
history. It may be said without fear of contradietion that
none of the original thirteen colonies sent a collection which
awakened a higher degree of interest than did that which
went from Massachusetts, as the result of the good work
done by the women of Boston and vicinity, whose collection
in the State Building has already been at length refeiTed to.
In his special report on the Fine Arts Exhibit Mr. C.
Howard Walker has called attention to the prominent part
played by men of Massachusetts in that department of the
Exposition relating to its artistic side. The administration
of the Exposition in its entirety has been highly commended.
While it is of course true that during the period of construc-
tion, as well perhaps as during the continuance of the Expo-
sition, a certain clash of authority may have made criticism
natural, it cannot be gainsaid that never before has such an
enormous sum of money been spent, never before have so
many men been under one authority, and never before has
such a gigantic enterprise been carried forward to such a
successful end with so little friction and with so little cause
for complaint. It is pleasant to record the fact that a large
number of those who were responsible for the great success
of this the greatest of all international expositions, whether
in the local directory or in positions of executive manage*
xnent, were men of Massachusetts. Including the Director-
General, there were in positions of high responsibility and
trust, as heads of departments or as the controlling spirit
in many of the bureaus, men born within the Commonwealth.
To them and to their associates are due the thanks of the
people of the United States for that intelligence and patient
perseverance, in the face of obstacles the nature of which
the stranger knew not of, as well as for that untiring and
self-sacrificing zeal, resulting, out of seeming chaos, in that
startling whole which, by those who saw it, will ever be re-
called as the most beautiful sight their eyes h^ve ever seen.
182 BBPORT OP BOARD OF
CONCLUSION.
The administration of the State Building during the
six months that it was open to the public was a matter
of deep concern to the Board, their one desire being
that the building should be so administered as to em-
phasize a hearty welcome and true hospitality, and to
this end it became necessary that, added to the cus-
todian and janitorial service, which, of course, was
needed in a building of the kind, there should be a
matron and assistants, who, taking an interest in the
building themselves, should be qualified to receive peo-
ple heartil}'' and cordially, and, at the same time, im-
part to the visitor some of its historic spirit.
There is perhaps no part of the labors of the
Board which its members take more satis&ction in
than in the selection of those who constantly and un-
complainingly assisted in the reception of visitors.
Realizing that this Exposition was truly an interna*
tional one, and feeling sure that among the visitors to
the building would be people of many nationalities, the
Board included among those who assisted them a lady
from the Chicago University thoroughly acquainted with
several languages. That this decision was a wise one
could, perhaps, be evidenced in no better way than by
WOBLD*S TAIR MANAQBHS. 183
stating the &ct that the servicea of this assistant were
frequently asked for by representatives of foreign gov-
ernments.
To Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Stockdale, custodian and
matron, respectively, of the Massachusetts State Build-
ing, the Board desire to express their thanks for their
constant and unselfish attention to the duties of their
o£Sce, as well as for the care which they ever gave to
the State Building. To the words of satisfSeustion and
thanks which members of the Board have frequently
heard expressed by visitors to the Exposition, to and
of Mrs. Hinckley, Miss Wallace and Miss Scndder, the
Board desire to add their expression of thanks for the
unfailing and kindly co-operation which these ladies
constantly gave them, and to the Misses Macdonald,
who, from almost the day of the appointment of the
Board until after the first of January, 1894, were con-
stantly in the office of the Massachusetts Board of
World's Fair Managers, the Board cannot express too
deeply their thanks for the devotion which they gave to
the interests of the office. Only the members of the
Board, by whom the Misses Macdonald were constantly
employed, can have any due appreciation of the ser-
vices which they rendered to the Commonwealth.
The Board feel that the State was singularly for-
tunate in securing such a corps of assistants for the
trying season while the Exposition was open, and they
are glad to testify not only to their own appreciation
184 BEPOBT OF WORLD'S FAIB MANAGBBS.
of services rendered but to the many words of praise
which have come to them from those who experienced
kindness and thoughtfdhiess from these assistants who
so uncomplainingly and so pleasantly attended to the
tedious and ofttimes perplexing duties in connection
with the administration of the State Building*
[IMJ
PREFACE TO APPENDICES.
With reference to the two appendices, the one contain-
ing a list of exhibitors from the Commonwealth, the other
the names of those to whom awards were granted, the
Board desire to say that they cannot guarantee their abso-
lute accuracy, though they have endeavored to secure the
most trustworthy information. Without such a preface they
might justly be held blameworthy for issuing, in connec-
tion with an official report, lists which they cannot but
believe will be found erroneous.
In making out such lists they have found, most unfor-
tunately, that the official catalogue cannot be depended on.
Supplementary to that publication they have put themselves
in communication with the Bureau of Awards and with the
chiefs of the various departments, and have endeavored to
give to the citizens of the Commonwealth the latest infor-
mation obtainable. Their report has been already too long
delayed, and to them it seems wiser to publish now than
to wait until every possible inaccuracy shall have been set-
tled, a result which in their opinion cannot be satisfac-
torily reached until the final report of the World's Colum-
bian Commission shall be made public.
[187]
APPENDIX A.
UST OF CONTRIBUTORS TO THE COST AND FURNISHINGS
OF THE MASSACHUSETTS STATE BUILDING.
MusDOCK Parlob Orate CoxPAirry
Household Abt Tilb Compant,
Dexter Bros., .
Jordan, Marsh & Co., .
C. F. Hovet & Co., .
The Smith Amthont Company,
Lawrence, Wilde & Co.,
Chickerino & Co., .
R. HOLLINGS & Co., .
Jacob W. Manning,
C. H. Kip, ....
Ford & Brooks, . •
Boston,
. Andirons, fireirons, etc
Boston,
. Tiles.
Boston,
. Shingles.
Boston,
. Carpets.
Boston,
. Linen.
Boston,
. Plnmblng.
Boston,
. Fomltore.
Boston,
. Pianos.
Boston,
. Electric fixtnres.
Reading,
. Plants, shrabs, etc.
Boston,
. Window screens.
Boston,
• Stained windows.
[1»J
190
BBFORT OF BOARD OF
APPENDIX B.
LIST OF PORTRAITS LOANED TO THE MASSACHUSETTS
BOARD OF WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS, WITH
NAMES OF OWNERS.
Portraits.
John A. Andrew, •
Ralph Waldo Emebson,
Mahia Mitchell, •
Bishop Ballou,
GOYEBNOB GOBE AND FaMILT,
Jared Spabks (bust),
Nathaniel Bowditch, .
Benjamin Fbanklin,
John Hancock,
Samuel Adams,
GOVBBNOR "WiNTHBOP,. •
William Ptnchon, .
Chablotte Cushman,
Gen. Henbt EInox, .
Hon. Bbaddock Dimmocx,
Cathebinb M. Smith, .
John Adams, .
John Quinct Adams,
Chables Fbancis Adams,
Theophilus Pabsons,
Col. Chables R. Lowell,
Gbn. Jos. Hooxeb, .
LOAMBD BT
John F. Andbbw.
Commonwealth.
Cape Cod Association.
Tufts College.
Women's Committee of
Boston.
Pbof. L. S. Pickebino.
William I. Bowditch.
Walteb Gilman Page.
Walteb Oilman Page.
Walteb Gilman Page.
Walteb Gilman Page.
Rev. Db. Ptnchon.
Caboline L. Cabb.
Cl\bencb W. Bowen.
Cape Cod Association.
Rev. Cras. A. Humph bets.
Adams Academy.
John Quixct Adams.
John Quinct Adams.
Miss M. S. Pabsons.
Mbs. Samuel Pxttmam.
Commonwealth.
WOKLD'S PAIR MANAGERS. 191
PORTBAITS. LOAWKD BT
Oen. £. y. SuMNEB, Commonwealth.
Oen. Chables Devens, Fredesick p. Vinton.
RuFus Choate, Hbs. Ellerton L. Pratt.
RoBER"^ C. Winthrop, Robert C. Winthrop.
Dr. Henrt J. BioELOW, W. Sturgis Bioelow.
Dr. Jacob Bioelow, W. Sturois Bioelow.
Gen. Wh. F. Bartlett, Mrs. Bartlett.
Prof. Benjamin Pierce, .... Prof. J. M. Pierce.
Gov. William £. Russell, . . . . E. C. Hoyet.
Jonathan Edwards, A. L. Frothinoham, Jr.
James Russell Lowell, .... James B. Lowell.
Wendell Phillips, Mrs. John C. Phillips.
Wm. Lloyd Garrison, Francis J. Garrison.
John Lothrop Motley, Edward Motley.
Bishop Haven, Rey. S. Hunt, D.D., 150
Fifth AYenue, N. Y.
George Cabot, Henry Cabot Lodge.
Daniel Webster, Francis H. Manning.
Horace Mann, • . Commonwealth.
Wm. E. Channino, ..... E. C. Hovey.
Bishop Brooks, Robert Treat Paine.
Robert Treat Paine (signer of the Declara-
tion of Independence), Robert Treat Paine.
George Ticknor, Anna E. Ticknor.
WlLLL%M H. PRESCOTT, AnNA E. TiCKNOR.
Charles Sumner, Charles W« Parker.
Theodore Parker, E. C. Hovey.
Henry W. Longfellow, .... Annie Longfellow Thorp.
James Freeman Clarke, .... Thomas C. Clarke.
Lydia Maria Child, Anns Whitney.
Maria Weston Chapman, .... Anne Whitney.
George Bancroft, John C. Bancroft.
Rey. F. H. Hedge, Charlotte A. Hedgb.
Professor Aoassiz, Elizabeth C. Aoassiz.
Lbmubl Shaw, S. S. Shaw.
192
KEPOBT OF BOARD OF
ESSEX iNSTITUTE COLLECTION.
POBTBAXTS.
John Endicott,
SiKEON BbaDSTREBT,
Geobob Pbabodt,
Joseph Pbabodt,
John BEBTBAif ,
Manasbet Cutleb,
Nathan Dane, .
William Obat, Jb.,
Sib Kichabd Saltonstall,
Elias Haskett Debet,
Nathaniel Bowditch,
Joseph Stobt, • •
Nathaniel Hawthobne,
Db. William Paine,
Joseph B. Felt,
Wm. H. Pbescott, •
Timothy Pickebino,
Timothy Dexteb, •
Henby Wheatland,
Capt. Geoboe Cubwen,
Rey. Geoboe Cubwen,
Abigail (Cubwen) Hawthobne,
Majob Stephen Sewbll,
Mabgabet (Mitchell) Sbwell,
Samuel Cubwen,
Chables W. XJpham,
Robebt Rantoul, Jb.,
John Cabnes, .
Geo. Washington, .
Mb8. Fitoh, • •
LOAHXD ST
Wm. Endicott.
Crrr of Salem.
S. Endicott Peabody.
S. Endicott Peabody.
Essex Institute.
Miss A. W. Woodbuby.
Miss A. W. Woodbuby.
Essex Institute.
F. H. Lee.
Essex Institute.
Essex Institute.
Essex Institxtte.
Essex Institute.
F. H. Lee.
Essex Institute.
Essex Institute.
F. H. Lee.
Essex Institute.
John Robinson.
John Robinson.
Geoboe R. Cubwen.
Geoboe R. Cubwen.
Geoboe R. Cubwen.
Geoboe R. Cubwen.
Geoboe R. Cubwbn.
Essex Institute.
Essex Institute.
Essex Institutb.
F. H. Lee.
Essex Institutb.
WOBLD'S PAIB MANAGERS.
198
A COLLECTION OF PORTRAITS AND AUTOGRAPHS LOANED BY MRS.
MARIA S. PORTER OF BOSTON.
Nathaniel Hawthorne.
LucT Lahcoh.
James Russell Lowell.
Wx. Henrt Channino.
Celia Thaxteb.
Wx • Lloyd Garrison.
Elizabeth B. Peabodt.
Wm. Dean Ho wells.
Thomas Bailet Aldrioh.
Sahtjel F. Smith.
John Boyle O'Reilly.
Oliver Wendell Holmes.
Edwin Arnold.
Jean Inoelow.
L. M. Alcott.
Louise Chandler Moulton.
Christopher P. Cranch.
T. C. Crawford.
James Freeman Clarke.
Christine Rossetti.
Gabriel Rossetti.
Thomas W. Parsons.
Col. T. W. Hiooiitoon.
John G. "Whittier.
Bishop Brooks.
Robert Browning.
H. B. Stowe.
Richard H. Dana*
Anne Whitney.
Helen Hunt Jackson.
LIST OF SILHOUETTES LOANED BY CHARLES P. BOWDITCH.
Jonathan Waldo.
Timothy Pickering.
Thomas Cushino.
Nathaniel West.
Samuel Sewall.
Ret. John Prince.
Mrs. Prince.
Jonathan Tucker.
Mrs. Tucker.
Mr. Bowditoh.
Rev. Dr. Lucius Bollbs.
Rev. Dr. T. Barnard, Jr.
Jonathan P. Saunders.
Rev. Dr. Bentlby.
Rev. Mr. Fisher.
Benjamin Pickering.
Joseph Peabody.
John G. Kino.
RsY. Dr. Daniel Hofxinb.
John Punchard.
194
BBPOBT OF BOARD OF
APPENDIX C.
LIST OF EXHIBITORS FROM MASSACHUSETTS TO WHOM
AWARDS WERE GRANTED.
DEPARTMENT OF MINES AND MINING.
Oroup
42.
Kaxe.
Addhkbs.
Dbscsiitioh.
State of MassachiuettB, .
-
Fo68il8, foBdl foot-prints and min-
eraU.
Group 44.
State of MassachnsettB, .
Stone.
Group 46.
FhcBnix Mannf g Co., .
Taunton, .
Graphite crucibles.
Group 49.
•
Washbom & Moen,
Worcester,
Iron and steel bars, rods and wire.
Group 61.
Washbnm & Moen,
Worcester,
Copper in ingots, bars and rolled
alleys and products.
Group 58.
Mackej, H. S.,
Boston, •
Electric drill, electric stone-carrjlng
machines.
Group 64.
Bradley Fertilizer Co., .
Boston, .
Pulverising mill.
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGBBS.
195
Group
68.
Naws.
Addrbss.
DBflCKipnoir.
City of Lynn, Ma8i.» •
-
First iron casting made in America.
•
DEPARTMENT OF MANUFACTURES.
Qroup 87.
Job. Bomett & Co.,
India Alkali Works,
Washburn & Moen,
Boston,
Boston, .
Worcester,
Flavoring extracts, perfumery, co-
logne water, toilet water and color
pastes, sachet powder and lavender
salts.
Alkalies.
Chemists* and dmggiste* wares and
supplies.
Group
88.
Boston Blacking Co., .
Boston, .
Blackings, dressings, stains and
leather-patching cement.
Dexter Bros., .
Boston, .
Shingle stains.
Gondola Tanning Co., .
Boston, .
Oakwood and chestnut tanning, tan-
ning extract.
Mitchell Stain Mannfact-
Lynn, • •
Bottom-finishing stains for booto and
nring Co.
John L. Whiting & Co.,
shoes.
Boston, •
Brushes, material used in the manu-
facture of brushes.
Wiggins & Stevens,
Maiden, .
Sandpaper.
Henry Woods Sons Co.,
Boston, .
Paints.
Washburn & Moen,
Worcester,
Painters' and glaziers' supplies.
Henry Woods Sons Co.,
Boston, .
Colors.
Whitemore Bros. & Co.,
Boston, .
Dressings, blackings, inks, polishes.
Qroup 89.
L. L. Brown Paper Co.,
Z. & W. Crane,
Crane h Co., . . •
Crane Bros., .
Franklin Typewriter Co.,
Hurlburt Paper Mfg. Co.,
Mills, Knight & Co.,
A. Lyman Williston, .
Whiting Paper Co.,
Byron Weston,
Adams, .
Dalton, .
Dalton, .
Westfield,
Boston, •
South Lee,
Boston, .
Northampton, .
Holyoke, •
Dalton, •
Record paper for blank books and
county records.
Writing papers, general exhibit,
pasted boards.
Bank-note paper, bond paper, parch-
ment paper.
Linen paper, writing paper, ledger
paper.
Franklin typewriters on desks.
Writing paper in packages and boxes.
Patent leather-covered renewable
memorandum books, fancy leather
work, card and coin cases, wallets.
Payson's indelible ink for marking
linen.
Bond paper, envelopes and fine folded
writing paper, bnstol board, ledger
paper, flat paper, superfine flat pa-
per for lithographing.
Ledger and record paper.
196
KEPORT OF BOARD OF
Group 90.
Name.
Address.
DBSCBIPnOH.
Atlas Tack Companj, .
Derby & Kilmer Desk
Co.
Decorative Art Society, .
Metropolitan Air Gkxxls
Co.
Mrs. A. J. Peters, .
Lowell School of Design,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Jamaica Plain,
Lowell, .
Pilgrim spring bed.
Derby roll-top desk, office fnmitore.
Embroidery.
Patent sofa and lonnge beds.
Embroidered pictnre.
Design for wall paper and lace, In-
dustrial exhibit of borean of applied
arts.
Qroup 91.
S. C. Blanchard, .
Boston, •
Plates.
Lncy Comins,
Jamaica Plain,
Bonbonniere.
Fiske, Homes & Co., .
Boston, .
Specialties in brick and terra ootta.
Grace H. Peck,
Boston, .
Decorated china.
M. J. Makee, .
Newton Centre,
Decorated plate.
The Low Art Tile Co., .
Chelsea, .
TUes.
Ella A. Richardson,
Boston, .
Vases and tiling.
Group 92.
Qnincy Granite Manu-
facturers' Association.
Quincy, .
Monuments, heading.
Group 96.
Continental StainedGlass
Works.
Miss Flora McDonald, .
Phipps, Slocum & Co., .
Siurah E. Whitman,
Stained glass.
Stained glass window.
Stained glass window.
Stained glass window.
Group 96.
Mrs. John Lowell, .
Boston, •
Carved oak chest.
Mrs. H. L. Gkx)dwin,
Pairpont Mfg. Co.,
Group 97.
Boston, .
New Bedford, .
Spoons, cups and foil.
Silver-plated ware.
Group 98.
W. & S. Blacklntown, .
R. F. Simmons & Co., •
Attleborough, .
Attleborongh, .
Gold-plated, silver and fancy charms.
Gold and rolled pU^te chains.
WOBLU'S PAIR MANA6BBS.
197
Group
99.
Nams. «
ADDKKS8.
DBgCRIPTIOir.
American W a 1 1 h a m
Watch Co.
Washburn & Moen,
Waltham,
Worcester,
Watch moTements, watch machin-
ery, decorated watch dials, main-
springs, non-magnetic watch move-
ments, collective exhibit of watch
movements and machinery, hair
springs.
Watch movements and parts of
watches, watchmakers* tools and
machinery in parts.
Group lOO.
McCallnm, Constable
Holyoke, .
Silk hosiery and tights, nnderwear
Hosiery Co.
Nonotnck Silk Co.,
and fancy caps.
Corticelli, spool silk and knitting cro-
Florence,.
chet and wash silk, machine twist,
silk nnderwear, hosiery.
TheWm. Skinner Mfg.
Holyoke.
Coat and cloak trimmings, tailors*
Co.
serges, tailors* braids.
Group 102.
Appleton Company,
Bamaby Mfg. Co.,
Boott Cotton Mills,
Clifton Mfg. Co., .
Dwight Mills,
Davol Mills, .
Finlayson, Bonsfield &
Co.
Fisher Mfg. Co.. .
Globe Yam Mills, .
Glasgow Co., .
Hadley Co., .
Knitted Mattress Co., .
Lancaster Mills, .
Lyman Mills, •
J. R. Leeson & Co.,
Merrimack Mfg. Co., •
Methnen Co., .
^aumkeag Steam Cotton
Mills.
Pacific Mnis, .
Pemberton Co.,
Sanford Spinning Co., .
Stevens Lmen Works, .
Wamsntta Mills, .
Jos. W. Woods & Sons,
Whittenton Mfg. Co.,
Boston, .
Fall River,
Lowell, .
Boston, •
Chicopee,
Fall River,
Grafton, .
Fisherville,
Fall River,
South Hadley
Falls.
Holyoke, .
Canton Jet., .
Clinton, .
Holyoke,
Boston, .
Lowell, .
Methnen, .
Salem, .
Lawrence,
Lawrence, •
Fall River,
Webster, .
New Bedford, .
Boston, .
Tannton, .
Cotton flannels, bed ticks.
Ginghams.
Manufacturing cotton goods, brown
and finished.
Brown cottons.
Brown cottons, bleached cottons.
Bleached muslins.
Threads for shoes and leather.
Cotton scrims.
Yams.
Ginghams.
Cotton yams, cotton threads.
Knitted cotton fabrics for mattresses,
stair pads and upholstery.
Ginghams.
Cottoh goods, bleached goods.
Shoe threads.
Printed cotton goods.
Fancy cotton fabrics.
P^uot bleached and brown muslin,
Pequot Naumkeag twills.
Printed dress fabrics, dyed dress fab-
rics, cotton dress fabrics, worsted
dress fabrics, woollen dress fab-
rics.
Fancy cotton fabrics.
Yams for knit goods.
Linen crash.
Cotton goods, shirtings, sheetings.
Plain and printed cotton flannels,
buntings, hoiiands and shirt-
ings.
Colored cotton fabrics.
198
KBPORT OP BOARD OP
Group 108.
Name.
Addrkss.
DESCRIPTXOir.
Ailington Mills, .
Assabet Mfg. Co., .
BaUardvale Mills, .
Belvidere Woolen Co., .
Berkeley Woolen Co., .
Blackstone Woolen Co.,
The Blackinton Woolen
Co.
City Mills, .
Calamet woolen Co., .
Connor Bros.,
E. G. Carlton & Sons, .
Clinton Worsted Co., .
Farr Alpaca Co., .
Gennanla Mills, .
Merrimack WoolenMllls,
Massachnsetts Mohair
Plush Co.
North Adams Mfg. Co.,
Pacific Mills, .
The Saxon Worsted Co.,
C. A. Stevens & Co.,
Stirling Mills,
Talbot Mills, .
Washington Mills, .
Wankenhose Co., •
Lawrence,
Ma3mard,
Ballardvale,
Lowell, .
Wales, .
Biackstone,
North Adams,
City Mills,
Uxbridge,
Holyoke, .
Rochdale,
Clinton, .
Uolyoke, .
Holyoke, .
Dracnt, •
Lowell, .
North Adams, .
Lawrence,
Franklin,
Ware,
Lowell, .
No. Billerica, .
Lawrence,
Lowell, •
Worsted yams, dress goods, coat
linings, fine cotton yams and men's
wear serges.
Cassimeres, tricots, ladies* cloth, otct-
coatings, fancy flannels.
White flannels.
Wool dress goods, wool flannels.
Kerseys, meltons.
Cassimeres.
Fancy cassimeres, fancy kerseys,
meltons, tricots, worsted suitings,
trouserings, cheviots, woollen cassi-
meres.
Felt goods.
Woollen fancy cassimeres.
Beavers.
Flannels.
Fancy worsted and trouserings.
Italian cloths, serges.
Beavers, kerseys, overcoatings, doak-
ings.
Cloakings, kerseys, shawls, woollen
goods.
Mohair, plush, grained plush, Span-
ish velvet.
Fancy cassimeres.
Worsted goods, woollen goods.
Fancy worsteds.
Flannels, fancy flannel.
Wool flannels, cheviots.
Woollen flannels, dress goods.
Woollen overcoatings and cloakings,
worsted suitings, worsted yams.
Hosiery.
Oroup 104.
W. \^» A.SI1, . • .
E. & A. H. Bacheller Co.,
Herold E. Blake, .
John R. Benton, .
Geo. M. Cobum & Co., .
Oeo. C. Davis,
Olivia P. Flint, .
Oeo. Fuller, .
Chas. K. Fox,
France & Spinney,
Hazen B. Goodrich,
J. J. Groves' Sons,
L. P. Hollander & Co., .
Hodgkins & Hodgkins, .
Herbert & Rapp Co.,
F. E. Hutchinson, .
G. W. Herrick & Co., .
Chas. E. Harwood & Co.,
Messenger Bros. & Sons,
Lynn,
Boston,
HaverhUl
Lynn,
Boston,
Lynn,
Boston,
Lynn,
Haverhill
Lynn,
Haverhill
Ljmn,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Haverhill
Lynn,
Lynn,
Boston,
Shoes and slippers.
Boots and shoes.
Shoe tips.
Heels and lifts.
Shoes and slippers.
Boots and shoes.
Corset waist
Ladies' boots and shoes.
Shoes and slippers.
Boots and shoes.
Boots, shoes and slippers.
Shoes.
Boys* clothing and costumes, ladies*
clothing, garments and millinery,
children 8 clothing and garments.
Hunting suit.
Shoe goring.
Shoes and slippers.
Boots and shoes.
Soles, tops and counters.
Driving coat, double-breasted box
coat.
WOBLD'S FAIB MANAOBBS.
199
Oroup 104—
• Concluded.
Name.
Addrkss.
Descsiptiov.
T. C. Plant, .
Lynn, •
Ladies' boots and shoes.
Frank D. Somers, .
Boston, .
Frock coat, waistcoat, tronsers.
J. S. Tnmer, .
Rockland,
Shoes.
J. L. Thompson Mfg.
Waltham,
Shoe bnckles for arctic overshoes and
Co.
heavy grade shoes, belt fasteners for
lacing belts on polleys.
Shillaber & Co., .
Lynn, • •
Boots and shoes.
Worcester Corset Co., •
Worcester,
Corsets.
Woodman & Howes, .
HayerhiU,
Shoes and slippers.
Williams, Clark & Co.,
Lvnn,
Haverhill,
Boots and shoes.
Morse Bros. & Co.,
Shoes and slippers.
Sewing machines, prodnctionB.
New Home Sewing Ma-
Orange, .
chine Co.
Thos. G. Plant,
Lynn,
Shoes.
Rice & Hntchins, .
Boston, .
Boots and shoes.
Ramsey Bros.,
Lynn, .
Boots and shoes.
J. F. Swain & Co. ,
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
D. A. Sutherland, .
Lynn, .
Boots, ties and slippers.
Oroup 106.
Ball and Socket Fastener
Co.
A,. L. FlSK, ...
M. P. Pace, •
Boston, .
Hingham,
Danvers, .
Fasteners for gloves.
Lace veil.
Lace veil.
Oroup 1Q9.
American Rubber Co., .
Boston, .
Mackintoshes, rubber boots, rubber
' boots and shoes, rubber clothing,
oil clothing.
Rubber brushes, rubber shoes.
C. J. Bailey & Co.,
Boston, .
Boston Belting Co.,
Boston, •
Rubber belting, rubber packing, rub-
ber hose, rubber blankets and
aprons, rubber-covered rolls, rub-
ber car, wagon and cylinder
springs, rubber heat bags, rubber
tubing, rubber mallets, rubber
mattings, mats and treads, rub-
ber soling, gaskets, rings and
deckle straps.
Boston Rubber Shoe Co.,
Boston, .
Rubber boots and shoes.
Stoughton Rubber Co., .
Boston, .
Men's rubber mackintoshes, boys'
mackintoshes, ladies' and men's
mackintoshes.
A. J. Towers, .
Boston, .
Oiled or waterproof clothing.
Washburn & Moen,
Worcester,
Insulating compounds.
Oroup no.
Morton E. Converse &
Co.
Miss £. S. Colby, «
Parker Bros., .
Winchendon,
Boston, •
Salem,
Wooden toys, wooden novelties.
Game.
Children's toys, children's games,
authors, bagatelle, office boy»
checkers, chess.
200
BEFOBT OF BOAHD OF
Oroup 111.
Name.
ADDRK88.
Kistier, Lech & Co.,
Lyman Smith's Sons Co.,
Shaw Leather Co., •
B. E. Willlard, .
Boston, •
Norwood,
Boston, • •
Lynn,
Sole leather.
Sheep and lamb skins, sheep skin,
bindings and linings.
Upper leather, shoes.
Soles and leather.
Group 112.
Hersey Mfg. Co., •
Boston, .
Water metersk
Oroup 118.
Smith & Wesson, .
Springfield,
Revolvers.
Oroup 116.
Edward Atkinson,
Boston,
•
•
The Aladdin oven.
Magee Fnmaoe Co.,
Boston,
•
•
Restaurant ranges, warm-flur heating
fnmaoe, ranges, parlor stoves, hot-
air and hot-water combination
fnmace.
Middleby Oven Co.,
Boston,
•
•
Portable brick bake oven, combined
baker and cake frier.
Bidgeway Fnmace Co.,
Boston,
•
•
Warm-air fnmaoe.
Smith & Anthony Stove
Boston,
•
•
Steam and hot-water heaters, fur-
Co.
naces.
Wood & Sherwood Co.,
Lowell,
•
.
Wire household goods, strainers,
broilers, egg whip, soap brackets.
Oroup lie.
National Key Opening
Can Co.
A. D. Puffer & Sons, .
Smith & Anthony Stove
Co.
Jas. W. Tufts,
The Low Art Tile Co., .
Chelsea, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Chelsea, •
Key-opening can.
Soda water apparatus and all appli-
ances.
Kettles.
Soda water apparatus and appurte-
nances.
Soda fountain (art tile).
Oroup 117.
Clinton Wire Cloth Co.,
Translucent Fabric Co.,
Clinton, .
Clinton, .
Wire cloth, fancy and galvanized
wire, wire nettings, fencing wire
cloth.
Translucent fabrics, transoms.
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS.
201
Group 117—
Oonehided.
Naxb.
Address,
Washburn &Moen Mfg.
Co.
Woroestef) •
Bound wire springs, flat steel springs,
round, angular and convey card
wires, special improTed plough steel
wire for suspension bridgecables, pa-
tent crucible and plough steel rope
wire, telegraph and telephone wire.
Group 118.
Putnam Nail Co., .
JohnHogan, .
Boston, •
Fitchburg, .
Horseshoe nails.
Horseshoes.
Group 110.
Oliyer Ames & Sons Co.,
Atlas Tack Co., .
American Improved
Wrench Co.
Barney & Berry, .
Blount Mfg. Co., •
Chas. Buck, .
Buck Bros., .
Cobum Trolley Track
Mfg. Co.
Geo. £. Davis,
Norton Door Check and
Spring Co.
Sneil Mfg. Co.,
Simons Mfg. Co., .
J. R. Torrey Razor Co.,
J. S. Thompson Mfg.
Co.
Washburn & Moen,
North Easton, .
North Easton, .
North Easton, .
Springfield,
Boston, .
Millbury,
Millbury,
Holyoke, •
BarringtonCen-
tre.
Boston, .
Fiskdale, .
Fitchburg,
Worcester,
Waltham,
Worcester,
Shovels, spades, scoops, drainage
tools.
Tacks and brads.
Double screw-jawpipe wrench, double
screw wrench, saving time and
labor.
Ice and roller skates.
Door checks, springs and stops, sash
locks.
Edge tools.
Light edge tools, chisels.
Parlor, bam and fire-door hangings.
Graters.
Automatic door checks and springs.
Boring tools.
Crescent-ground cross-cut saw, saw-
set.
Razors.
Rivets for shoe, harness, tranks, etc
Builders* hardware. Artistic display
and completeness of exhibit.
Group 120.
Smith & Anthony Stove Boston, .
Co.
Water doseto, sinks, sanitary traps.
Group 121.
American Improved
Wrench Co.
Mrs. Harriet Browne, .
Meyer Putz Pomade Co.,
Standard Rivet Co.,
Heading machine for scarf and stick
pins.
Dress-cutting system.
Liquid Putz pomade (brass polish),
silver polish (Putz paste).
Rivets for leather.
202
BEPOKT OP BOABD OP
Oroup IQil— Qmeluded,
Namk.
Addrkss.
Dkscriptiok.
Mrs. B. A. Steams,
Otis C. White,
Wobnm, .
Worcester,
Dress-catting system.
Adjustable extension movement in
l»ll-and-socket joints, electric lamp
supporters, surgical instrument
holaers, swiyelling and clamping
cane joints, adjustable and exten-
sion l»ll-iuid-BOcket joints.
Stool and foot rest for shoe 8tc»e
Whitmore Bros., .
Boston, .
salesmen.
DEPARTMENT OF MACHINERY.
Oroup 60.
Ashton Valve Co.,
Hancock Inspirator Co.,
Hersey Mfg. Co., .
Mills, John H., .
Puffer, A. D., & Sons, .
Tiipp Metallic Packing
npp
Cfo.
Tufts, James W., .
Walnwright Mfg. Co., .
Washburn & Moen,
Walworth Mfg. Co.,
White, Otis C,
Boston, .
Boston, .
South Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, •
Boston, .
Boston, •
Boston, .
Worcester,
Boston, .
Worcester,
Pop safety valves.
Inspirators for feeding steam-boilers.
Rotary pumps.
Mills sectional cast-iron boiler.
Bottling machinery, soda water ap-
paratus.
Metallic packing for piston rods and
valve stem.
Carbonating machinery.
Surface condenser and fioed water
heater. •
Apparatus for the transmission of
power.
Brass and iron valves, cocks and fit-
tings for steam, water and gas.
Adjustable expansion movement in
iMBkU-and-socket joints as applied to
machinery.
Oroup 70.
Cobum Trolley Track
Mfg. Co.
Holyoke, .
Sliding or travelling ladder.
Oroup 71.
American Tool Co.,
Brainard Milling Ma-
chine Co.
Eaton, Geo. H., & Co., .
Hurlburt, Bogers Ma-
chine Co.
Morse Twist Drill and
Machine Co.
Boston, •
Hyde Park,
Boston, .
South Sudbury,
New Bedford, .
Brass finishing, lathe and oil separa-
tor.
No. 12 and 14 tool-room, milling ma-
chine ; No. 1, 3, 4^ standard, uni-
versal milling machine, upright
plain milling machine, horizontal
plain milling machine, long feed
milling machine, cam cutting ma-
chine, small milling cutter grinder,
gear cutting machine.
Power presses.
Cutting off and centring machine.
Twist drills, taps and dies, milling
cutters, reamets and chucks.
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGBRS.
Qroup 71— Oonehid4d,
203
Namb.
ADDKK88. DKSCRIFTIOK.
1
Prentice Bros., •
Reed, F. E., & Co.,
Stark, John, .
Walworth Mfg. Co., .
Worcester,
Worcester,
Waltham,
Boston, .
Screw cutting engine lathes, upright
drilling machines.
Standard lathes.
Lathes.
Machine for tapping street main
under pressure, tools for catting
and threading pipe, taps, dies and
wrenches.
Group 72.
Barrows, A., .
Bertrand Lock Stitch
Sewing Machine Co.
Boston Lasting Machine
Co.
Brett, Henry W., .
Bresnahan, Maurice Y.,
&Co.
Bnsell Trimmer Co., .
Chase Lasting Machine
Co.
Cheney Bigelow Wire
Works.
Crompton Loom Works,
Consolidated Hand
Method Lasting Ma-
chine Co.
Fifleld.C. S., &Co., .
Flagg Mfg. Co., •
Foster Machine Co.,
Globe Buffer Co., .
Goodyear Shoe Machin-
ery Co.
Harlow, Chas. F., & Co.,
Hartford Bros.,
Hemingway Bros.,
Huppef £. A.,
Jamieson, S. W., Boot
and Shoe Crimping
Machine.
Knowles Loom Works, .
Leeson, J. R., & Co.,
Amogen Machine Co., .
Littleton, L. M., .
Lowell Machine Shop, .
Lufkin, John W., .
Marshall Engine Co., .
Marshall, H. T., .
McKay &BiscIow,H.M.
Co.
Miller, 0. A'., .
Morley Button Sewing
Machine Co.
Naumkeag Buffing Ma-
chine Association.
Brockton,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Lynn,
Boston, •
Boston, .
Springfield,
Worcester,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Westfield,
Boston, .
Boston, •
Boston, .
Boston, .
Lynn,
Lynn,
Boston, .
Worcester,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Brockton,
Lowell, .
Boston, .
Turner's Falls,
Brockton,
Boston, .
Brockton,
Boston, .
Beverly, .
Last and shoe rack.
Lock stitch welt sewing machine.
Boot and shoe lasting machines.
Shoe upper cementing machine.
Automatic boot and shoe sole ler-
eller.
Edge trimmer.
Shoe lasting machine.
Paper makers* wires.
Looms.
Shoe lasting machine.
Shoe machinery.
Inseam trimming machine.
Carpet making machinery.
Shoe machinery.
Shoe making machinery.
Union steam furnisher.
Sole rounding and pattern drafting
machine.
Shoe machinery.
Shoe racks.
Boot and shoe crimping machine.
Looms.
Universal winding machine for
thread, yam and wire.
Leather skiving machine.
Heel seat beading machine.
Exhibit of cotton manufacturing
machinery.
Two-vamp folding machine.
Refining engine for paper making.
Straight folding machine.
Heel compressing and heeling ma-
chinery.
Boot and shoe trees and treeing ma-
chines.
Shoe button sewing machine.
Buffing machine.
204:
BBPOBT OF BOABD OT
Group 72—0dneiud«i.
Naxb.
ADDRxaa.
Dbscriptiox.
NorriB, T. A., Machine
Co.
New Home Sewing Ma-
chine Ck>.
Paragon Needle Co.,
Reese Bntton Hole Ma-
chine Co.
Holt, J. S., & Co., .
Sannden. S. L., •
Sawyer Leather Ma-
chinery Co.
Stanley Mfg. Co., .
Steam Heated Horn Co.,
Standard Rivet Co.,
Stoddard Crimping Ma-
chine Co.
Swain & Fuller Mfg. Co.,
Thompson, Jndson L.,
Mfg. Co.
Trip Giant Leveler Co.,
Tubnlar Rivet Co.,
Union Heel Trimmer
Co.
Union Leather Measur-
ing Machine Co.
Union Edge Setter Co.., .
Yanghn Machinery Co.,
Wire Grip and Fastening
Machinery Co.
Worcester, A., & Sons, .
Brockton,
Orange, .
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Lynn,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Waltham,
Lynn,
Boston,
Boston,
Peabody,
Boston,
Salem,
Boston,
Boston,
Heel bieat finishing machine.
Tailor sewing machine.
Paragon vamp marker.
Bntton-hole machinery.
Boot and shoe monogram stamping
and boot and shoe bottom polish-
ing roll.
Shoe racks.
Leather-measuring machine.
Boot and shoe machine.
Steam-heated horn for soling ma^
chines, attachments for sole sewing
machines.
Standard rivet machines.
Shoe-crimping machine.
Boot and shoe machinery.
Madiines for driving rivets.
Giant leveling machine.
Riveting and rivet-setting machines.
Bosell heel trimmer.
Leather-measnring machine.
Edge-setting machines.
Hide and leather working machinery.
Clinching and slugging machinery.
Brushes for the manufacture of boots
and shoes.
Group 73.
Simonds Mfg. Co.,
Woods, S. A., Machine
Co.
Fitchburg,
Boston, .
Process of tempering saw blades,
form of inserted saw teeth in cir-
cular saws, various wood saws and
milling saws, cutting knives.
Planing and matching machines,
flooring machines, moulding ma-
chines, band saw, self-feed rip saw,
resaw for siding shop surface planer,
cabinet surface planer, double snr-
facer and timber sizer, inside
moulding machine.
Group 74.
Child Acme Cutter and
Press Co.
Elliott Machine Co.,
Golding & Co.,
Mclndoe Bros.,
Boston, •
Georgetown,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Self-clamping paper-cutting machine.
Thread stitching and tying machine
for books and pamphlets.
Platen printing presses, printing ma-
terial.
Cylinder printing press for printing
from half-toneanoiotherengravings.
WOBLD'S TAIB HANAOBRS.
206
Group 77.
Name.
Address.
DSSCBIPTIOK.
Crosby Steam Gange and
Valve Co.
Fanenil Watoli Tool Co.,
Northampton Emery
Wheel Co.
Norton Emery Wheel
Co,
Boston, .
Boston, .
L^ecLs, • •
Worcester,
Stationary, marine and locomotive
pop safety valves, feed water regn-
lator and revolution counter, steam
engine indicator, single spring
gauge, donble spring gauge and
water line syphon valve, pressure
gauge tester.
Bench lathes and attachments, watch-
makers' latnes and attachments,
staking tools and the livet patent
friction clutch, watchmakers^ lathe
and attachments.
Emery wheels.
Emery wheels, tool-room grinding
machine, twist drill grindmg ma-
chine.
Oroup 79.
Hersey Mfg. Co., .
South Boston, .
Standard sugar dryer and granu-
lator, cube sugar press.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.
Oroup 8.
Charles G. Stebbins,
Frank O. Williams,
Walter M. Lowney &
Co.
South Deerfield,
Sunderland, .
Boston, .
Maple syrup.
Maple syrup.
Chocolate bonbons.
Group 6.
E. T. Cowdrey,
North Packing and Pro-
vision Co.
J. W. H. Hnckins & Co.,
Canned meats and canned soups.
Meats in pickle, dry salt, sausages
and bacon meats.
Canned meats and soups.
Group 7.
Simpson, Mclntire & Co.,
Butter in hermetically sealed pack-
ages for hot climates.
Group 8.
Massachusetts State Agri-
cultural Exhibit.
Walter Baker & Co., .
Nester Gianachs, .
Leaf tobacco.
Chocolate and cocoa.
Egyptian cigarettes.
206
BBPOBT OF BOABD OF
Group 9.
Nams.
ADDBE88.
DxscBZPTioir.
Chase Cotton Oin Co., .
Eagle Cotton Gin Co., .
Milford, .
Bridgewater, •
Cotton gin rotary stripper roller.
Cotton machinery.
Group 11.
Cushing Process Co., .
Boston, .
Patent process for pnrlfying llqaort
or spirits.
Group 14.
Washburn & Moen,
Worcester,
Barbed fence wire and bale ties.
Group 17.
North Packing and Pro-
Tision Co.
Crystal Gelatine Co., •
Boston, .
Boston, •
Fertilizer.
Gelatines and coflto settler.
Group 18.
North Packing and Pro-
vision Co.
Boston, .
Lard and lard oil.
Live Stock.
Francis Shaw,
C. I. Hurt, •
Wayland,
Lowell, .
Gnemsey cattle, boll, three years or
over ; second premium.
Jersey cattle, cow, four years or over;
third premium.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION,
Group 80.
Old Colony Raihroad Co.,
Norton, A. 0.,
Bnrnham & Dnggan
R.R. Appliance Ca
Boston & Lockport Block
Co.
Eastman Heater Co., •
Boston, .
Boston, •
Boston, •
Boston, .
Boston, .
Passenger locomotive and historical
exhibit.
Lifting jacks.
Switch.
Wooden and steel blocks for railroad
use.
Heater and ventilatoir car, refrigerator
Jewett Supply Co.,
Cobnm Trolley Track
Mfg. Co.
Ashton Valve Co.,
Bird & Son, F. W.,
Boston, .
Uolyoke, •
•
Boston, .
East Walpole, .
Anti-friction device for passenger car.
Overhead carrying track.
Pop safety valve.
Waterproof fabrics.
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGBBS.
207
Group 81.
Kakb.
ADDRS8A.
DSflCKIPTIOX.
Lambeth Cotton Rope
Co.
Bemis Car Box Co.,
Bobinson Electric Truck
and Supply Co.
Washburn & Moen,
New Bedford, .
Springfield,
Boston, •
Worcester,
Lambeth cotton rope.
Electrical motor truck.
Electric radial truck.
Cables for street railways.
Oroup 83.
Hickory Wheel Co.,
Amesbury Carriage Co.,
United States Whip Co.,
Dalzell Axle Co., .
Currier, Cameron & Co.,
Simonds Rolling Ma-
chine Co.
Washburn & Moen,
Folger 8c Drummond, .
Briggs Carriage Co.,
Clarkson & Co., J. T., .
Biddle, Smart & Co., .
Parry & Co., A. N ,
Bailey & Co., S. R.,
Neal & Bolser,
Osgood Morrill,
Newton, .
Amesbury,
Westfield,
South Egre-
mont.
Amesbury,
Fitchburg,
Worcester,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Sulky, hickory bicycles.
Exercising break.
Whips and whip machinery, oak and
hickory sticks, woven horse lining,
Yulcanized rubber and eel skin.
Fine carriage axles.
Spider phaeton.
Steel balls and steel rolled specialties.
Bicycle spokes.
Saloon trap.
Trap.
Crown Prince trap.
*' Columbus " trap.
" The Brentwood '* carriage and " The
Myopia " carriage.
Essex trap and whalebone road
wagon.
Lenox cart.
Brunswick trap.
Oroup 86.
Richardson, Chas. M., .
Cape Ann Anchor Works,
Boston and Lock port
Block Co.
Meaney, John,
Old Colony S.S. Co., .
Clark, Edw. S., .
Essex Institute and Pea-
body Academy.
Stewart & Binney, .
Washburn & Moen,
Olouoester,
Gloucester,
Boston, •
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Salem, .
Boston, •
Worcester,
Steering apparatus.
Anchors.
Yacht and vessel supplies, pump and
blocks.
Rowing-seat roller, steering gear,
stretcher, etc.
Steamer "Puritan."
Steam engines, boUers and propellers.
Historical pictures of Salem vessels
and pictures of events in marine
history of Salem.
Models of yachts, pilot boats and
fishermen.
Steel hawsers, steel ropes and galvan-
ized wire and wire ropes for ships*
rigging.
208
BEPOBT OF BOARD OF
DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND FISHERIES.
Group 87.
27AXB.
Addskm.
Dksckiptioh.
John R. Neal & Co., .
Olonoester Board of
Trade.
Boston, .
Olonoester,
Casts of fishes, charts of fishing
grounds (oollectiye exhibit).
AlgiB, sponoes and corals, shells, sea
plant ana formations, charts and
maps (collective exhibit).
Group 88.
John B. Neal & Co., .
Boston, •
Fishing lines, trawls, fish hooks, ffill
nets, nets, seines, models, nsh
traps, needles, fishing implements.
buoys, pictures, boats, etc
Models of fishing Tessels, andent
Olonoester Board of
Olonoester,
Trade.
and modem nautical instruments,
charts, compasses, ffUsses, marine
clocks, alarms and signals, pictures.
■
statistics, fishing lines, nets and
seines, lamps, lanterns, buoys,
anchors, etc.
J. W. Marston & Co., .
Boston, •
Illustration of lobster Industrr, gear
pots, traps, models of weUs and
cars.
American Net and Twine
Boston, «
Seines, nets, twines, models of
Co.
seines, traps and nets, netting,
buoys, cordage, trawls, needles,
pictures, twine, weirs (coUectlTe
■
exhibit).
Group 40.
John B. Neal & Co.,
Gloucester Board of
Trade.
J. W. Marston & Co., .
A. H. Bailey, .
Russian Cement Co., .
Gloucester Isinglass and
Glue Co.
E. K. Bumham,
Wm. F. Nye,
Esra Kelley, •
Boston, •
Gloucester,
Boston, •
Boston, •
Olonoester,
Boston, .
Gloucester,
New Bedford, •
New Bedford, .
Pictures of models of curing estab-
lishments, cod liver oil, cued fish
and fishing implements, fish curing
tools, canned finnan baddies.
Models of fish -curing plants, dried
fish, also salted, smoked and cured
piclded fish, barrels, tubs, kits, etc.
Model of lobster cooking establish-
ment, model of lobster market.
Bailey*s extract (patent) of clams.
Fish glue, mucilage, fertiliser, hats,
bonnets and shoes in which La
Page's slue is used, fish skins from
which tne glue is made.
Fish glue, fish fertiliser, glased paper,
adhesive plaster, com plaster,
labels, envelopes, fish skins used
in making glue, etc
Canned mackerel.
Watch, clock and chronometer oQ.
Fish oil for watches and small ma-
chinery.
WORLD'S PAIR MANAGERS.
209
DEPARTMENT OF ETHNOLOGY.
Xams.
AOOUCM.
DKflCBIPTIOX.
Peabody Mnsenm of
Archieology.
Prof. Eben N. Honford,
Albert Rosenthal, .
George Hant (collector),
E. H Thompson, .
Mrs. Emma Patten (col-
lector).
Geo. A. Dorsey (col-
lector).
State of Massachmetts,
Fred. A. Ober, •
Thomas Cummlngs,
Hadji Ephriam Bengniat,
Plans of the Peabody Mnsenm, pub-
lications, etc., archiBological col-
lection from Penobscot valley,
Maine, casts and photos of ancient
monuments oi Honduras, model of
Serpent Mound, model of Turner,
group of earthworks, charts illus-
trating reconstruction of Mexican
calendar, study of Omaha Indian
music, ethnological collection firom
Nez Percys Indians.
Maps, charts and books relating to
voyages of Norsemen.
Engraved portraits of members of
Continental Congress.
Kwakiutl house, families of Kwakiutl
Indians.
Fac-simile of portions of the ruins of
Yucatan.
Pioneer log cabin.
Collection of crania from Peru,
earthenware and woodenware
vessels, pottery from northern
Peru, contents of one hundred
graves, contents of eleven graves,
garments, implements, weapons,
etc., contents of fifteen graves, con-
tents of five graves, ruins and
ancient burying ground of ancient
Peru, pottery, gold, silver and
copper ornaments, garments, clay
images, looms, spindles, etc
Colonial exhibit, historical collection.
Photos of places identified with
voyages of Columbus.
Model in plaster of monument to
Colnmous.
Ceremonial objects of the Jewish
religion.
DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS.
Group 180.— Sculpture.
Kitson, Henry H.,
Music of the Sea (bronze), Portrait
Bust (marble), Christ Crucified
(plaster). The Age of Stone (plas-
ter).
Group 140.— Oil PaintinfiTB.
Benson, Frank W.,
Figure in White, Portrait in White,
Girl with a Red Shawl.
210
BBFOBT OF BOABD OI*
Oroup 140. — Oil Paintinffs ~ Concluded.
Namx.
AOOBIUS.
DBSCBIPnOV.
Tarbell, Edmnnd C.» .
Tinton, Frederick P., .
Boston, •
Boston, • •
Girl and Horse, In the Orchard, My
Sister Lydia.
Portrait of a Lady, Portrait of
Angnstns Flagg, Portrait of Theo-
dore Chase, Portrait of C. C. Lang-
deU.
Oroup 141.— Water Oolors.
Sears, Sarah C. (Mrs.))
Boston, .
A Spanish Oirl, Portrait, RomoUu
Oroup 148.— Bngrravlnfira, Btohinfira and Prints.
Closson, W. B., •
Dana, William Jay,
Kingsley, Elhridge,
Lancaster,
Brookline,
Hadley, .
Saxon, The Mirror (after Bnnker),
Springtime (after £. Major), The
Vonng Sqnire (after Contore),
Night Moths, Winifred Dysart
(after George Fnller) , The Immacn-
late Conception (after Mnrillo).
fragment. Mother and Child
(after A. H. Thayer), Ideal Head
(after A. H. Thayer), The Qnad-
roon Girl (after Geovge Faller),
The Listeners (after W. M. Hunt),
The Mother (after Simmons),
Flowers, The Irrigating Ditch,
Sheep Shearers (after Millet).
Twilight (after J. Appleton Brown),
The Mill at Cleeve (after J. Apple-
ton Brown), Pine Woods in Canada
(after F. uopkinson Smith), Snnset
(after Corot).
The White Mountains, New England
Elms, Old Homestead (after J. F.
Mniphy), Late Summer (after R.
Collin) jConnecticntValley, Journey
Northward, The Flying Dutchman
(after A. P. Ryder), A Morning,
The Old WeU (after J. F. Murphv),
Silence (after W. Bliss Bato),
Midsummer (after Daubigny),
Winter Evening (after D. W.
Tryon), Autnnm Evening (after
D. W. Tryon).
Oroupa 18&-146. —Architecture.
liongfellow, A I den &
Harlow.
Carnegie library and Music HaU,
Pittsburg (photograph), the same
— another view (photo^ph), first
floor plan of the same, second floor
flan, Carnegie Ofiioe Building,
Ittsbnrg (photograph). City Hall,
Cambridge, Mass. (photograph f.
House at Cambridge, Mass. (photo-
graph).
WORLD'S FAIB MANAGERS. 211
Oroup 180-146.— Architecture— Concluded.
Kaxb.
•
A0DBK88.
DB8CRXPT10V.
Feabodj & Steams,
Wheelwright, Edmnnd
March.
Boston, •
Boston, •
Sonth Pocch of Machinery Uall,
World's Columbian Exposition
(water color), Office Sketches
(water color).
Primary School House, Jamaica
Plain (pen drawing by Charles D.
Maginnis), New Police Station for
Brighton District (pen drawing by
Charles D. Maginnis), Robert
Gould Shaw Grammar School,
West Roxbury, Mass. (pen draw-
ing by Charles D. Maginnis), Per-
spective View of New Ci^ Hall for
Boston (pen drawing by Charles D.
Maginnis), Design for Arcading
Old State House (jpen drawing by
Charles D. Maginnis), Hospital for
Contagious Diseases (pen draw-
ing). Two Views for House for
E. C. Stedman, New Castle, N. H.
(photograph).
DEPARTMENT OF HORTICULTURE.
Oroup 22.
Farquhar, R. & J.,
Massachusetts State,
Rea Brothers,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Norwood,
Cyclamen, primroses and cinerarias.
Ornamental plants.
Herbaceous plants.
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICITY,
Oroup 126.
A. & J. M. Anderson,
Elektron Mfg. Co.,
Washburn & Moen,
Boston, •
Springfield,
Worcester,
Insulators for railway construc-
tion.
Automatic motor-starting iheostat.
Bare copper wire, trolley wire and
hard-diawn telephone wire, insu-
lated wire, " Salamander."
Group 127.
Elektron Mfg. Co.,
Springfield,
Electric motors, direct current and
constant potential.
Oroup 128.
A. &. J. M. Anderson, . Boston, • . ' Trolley wheels.
212
BEPOBT OF BOARD OF
Oroup 120.
Namk.
ADDEB88.
Dbscrxptiov.
Walworth Mfg. Co.,
Boston, .
Poles for sapporting trolley wires,
etc.
Oroup 182.
Electrical Forging Co., .
Thompson Electrical
Welding Co.
Boston, .
Boston,
Apparatus for heating and welding
metals, apparatus for heating
metals by immersing them in a
liquid.
Apparatus for welding metals.
Oroup 138.
Electric Heat Alarm Co.,
Boston, .
Thermostat.
DEPARTMENT OF LIBERAL ARTS.
Oroup 147.
Aid for Destitute Mothers
and Children.
Boston City Hospital, .
Boston Associated Char-
ities.
Boston Children's Aid
Society.
Boston Water Board, .
Boston Filter Co., .
Cram, A. W.,
Emergency Hygiene As-
sociation.
Instructive District Nurs-
ing Association,
Industrial Aid Society
for Prevention of Pau-
perism.
Lyman School for Boys,
Lunatic Hospital, .
Massachusetts Reform-
atory.
McLean Hospital, .
Massachusetts £ m e r -
gency and Hygiene
Association.
Normal School of Gym-
nastics.
Overseers of the Poor, .
Principal Register,
Posse, Baron Nils, .
Qaincy Shaw's Day
Nursery.
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Chelsea, .
Haverhill,
Boston, •
Boston, .
Boston, .
Westborough, .
Worcester,
Sherbom,
Somerville,
Boston, •
Boston, .
Boston, .
Chicopee,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Statistics and reports.
Photos, plans, etc
Volumes, forms.
Charts, home library, etc.
Relief map and photographs.
Boston water purifier.
The Perfection Cleanout.
Reports.
Reports.
Four TolumeB, forms and reports.
Specimens of work, etc
Reports.
Charts, etc
Charts and photos.
Maps, photographs, etc.
Gymnastic apparatus.
Record blanks, etc
Volume reports.
Apparatus for Swedish gymnasium
Charts and photographs.
WOBLD'S FAIB MANAGERS.
213
Oroup 147— Cbne/tMlMi.
Xamb.
AODRSM.
DUCBIPTIOV.
State of Massachusetts, •
State of Massachasetts, .
State of Massachusetts, .
State Industrial School
for Girls.
State Board of Lunacy
and Charity.
Sode^ of St. Vincent
de Paul.
South End Industrial
School.
Society for Prevention
of Cruelty to Children.
State Board of Health, .
State of Massachusetts, .
Lancaster,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, •
Massachusetts Prison Commission.
Commissioners of Savings Banks.
Maps, etc., co-operative banks,
ninety-six statistical charts.
Photo^phs, statistics, etc.
Charts, photos, books, etc.
Record blanks, etc
Charts, samples of work, etc.
Reports, etc.
Maps, charts, etc., photomicrographs
of adultations, maps showing dis-
tribution of diseases by townships,
maps of typhoid fever epidemics,
charts showing reduction in trichi-
nosis.
The construction, heating and venti-
lating of school-houses, etc.
Group 148.
Ayer, J. C, Co., .
Doliber-Goodale Co.,
Nye, Sherman R., .
Tracy, Dr. Ed. A.,
Lowell, .
Boston, ,
Chicopee,
Boston, .
Pharmaceutical preparations.
Mellin*s food for infknts and invalids.
Trusses.
Surgical splints for all parts of the
body.
Group 140.
Amherst College, .
•
Abbott Academy, .
Bradley, Milton & Co., .
Classical High School, .
Clark University, .
Crocker, Miss Lucretia,
Draper, Mrs. Henry,
Evening Schools, Ele-
mentary and Un-
graded.
Fitz, Geo. W.,
Grammar School, .
Grammar School, .
Grammar Grades, .
Gilman, Miss Clarabel, .
High and Training
School.
Agassiz, Mrs. Louis,
Amherst, •
Andover, .
Springfield,
Worcester,
Worcester,
Boston, •
Boston, .
Worcester,
Cambridge,
Boston, •
Everett, .
Waliham,
Boston, •
Lawrence,
Cambridge,
Photos, plans, books and college
work.
School work.
Kindergarten material.
Bound volumes, mathematics and
algebra.
University work, forty volumes,
. advanced researches, photos.
School exhibit.
Reports, Draper catalogue, etc
School work.
Apparatus.
work of pupils.
Bound volume, English literature,
and eleven other volumes.
Framed working drawings to go with
manual training.
Lessons in zoology.
Language work.
Lessons in natural history.
214
BBPOBT or BOARD OF
Oroup 140 " OoiKHnu€d,
Name.
ADDKB5S.
Dbscriptios.
I
Henchman, Miss Annie
P.
Hopkins, Mrs. L. R., .
Mary H. Hunt,
Horace Mann School for
Deaf.
** Harvard Annex,"
High Schools of Boston,
Hi^h Schools of Brook-
hne.
High Schools of Brain-
tree.
High Schools of Chelsea,
High Schools of Fall
River.
High Schools of Hlng-
ham.
High Schools of Hol-
brook.
High Schools of Maiden,
High Schools of Pitts-
field.
High Schools of Qnincy,
High School, .
High School, .
High School, .
Harvard University,
Immaculate Conception
School.
Lasell Seminary, •
Mechanic Arts High
School.
Massachusetts State Nor-
mal Art School.
Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
Museum of Fine Arts,
School of Drawing
and Painting.
Mount Holyoke College,
Massachusetts State
Board of Education.
Boston, .
Boston, .
Hyde Park,
Boston, .
Cambridge,
Boston, .
Salem,
Springfield,
westfield,
Cambridge,
Maiden, .
Aubumdale,
Boston, •
Boston, .
Boston, •
Boston, .
South Hadley,
Sdentiflc method.
Kindergarten educational exhibit.
Work in scientific temperance.
Geography, history, language, dicta-
tion, etc.
Photos of exteriors and interiors.
Pupils' work.
Bound volumes, zoology, history, etc
Bound volumes, literature, astron-
omy, etc.
Bound volumes, English literature,
and other high school work.
Collective exhibit.
Bound volumes, botany.
Bound volumes, Csesar, geology,
English, etc.
Chenucal preparations made by pa-
piis, and full line of school work.
Pupils' work.
School work.
Students' work in Latin and Oieek.
Framed writing and school work.
Bound volumes of book-keeping and
business practice.
Exhibit of the Museum, Astronom-
ical Observatory, Col. University,
exhibit of the Department of Phy-
sics, Chemistry, Graduate School,
Lawrence Sdentiflc School, Vet-
erinaiTf School, Dental School,
Divinity School, Medical School,
Law School, collective exhibit of
the Department of Geology.
Eighteen volumes, class- work, draw-
ing and kinder^uian work.
School work.
Photographs of all Boston battalions.
illustrations of systems of physical
culture, school work.
School work.
Books, theses, shop work, etc
Drawing in pencil from objects, fhnn
a decorative point of view, and
water colors.
Catalogue and full line of college
work.
Charts showing attendance in evening
schools, chart showing expenses,
text books, supervision of public
schools, transportation of pupils of
public school, education exhibit,
map of location and number of free
public libraries, report of Stale
Board of Education, the public
statistic of Massachusetts.
WOKLD>S 7AIB BCAKAOEBS.
216
Oroup 140 ^ O^mcluded,
Nakb.
ADDBU8.
DKflCBIPTIOH.
Nonnal School,
Normal School,
Normal Training School,
Notre Dame Academy, .
Notre Dame Academy, .
Oar Lady Perpetual
Light.
Perkins Institation and
Massachusetts School
for the Blind.
Private Institution,
Feeble Minded.
Primary Schools and
Grammar Schools.
Primary Schools, .
Public Schools,
Public Schools (gram-
mar grade).
Public Schools, •
Public Schools,
Public Schools,
Public Schools,
Public Schools,
Public Schools,
Public Schools,
Public Schools,
Public School System of
Boston.
Public School System of
Massachusetts.
Prang Educational Co.,
Sisters of Notre Dame, .
St. Mary's School,
St. Joseph's School,
Tufts College,
Wellesley College^ •
Williams College, .
Richardson, Mrs. £. A.,
Richards, Mrs. £. H., .
Smith College,
Shaw, Quincy A., .
Society to Encourage
Study at Home.
State I^ormal School, .
St. John's School, .
St. Joseph's School,
Worcester,
Westfleld,
Holyoke,
Boston, •
Roxbury,
Roxbury,
South Boston, .
Barre,
Pittefield,
Boston, >
Boston, .
Brookline,
Chelsea, .
Medford, .
North Adams, .
Pittefield,
Quincy, .
Salem, • •
Someryille,
Shrewsbury, .
Boston, .
Lynn, .
Waltham,
College Hill, .
Wellesley,
Williamstown,
Massachusette,
Boston, .
Northampton, .
Jamaica Plain,
Boston, .
Bridgewater, .
Canton, •
Chioopee,
Framed photos and fun line of
school work.
School work.
Bound volume, history and course of
study. Normal Training School.
Five volumes, class work.
Three volumes, class work.
Eight volumes class work, one
volume surveying.
Embossed books, zoological, botani-
cal and physical, models in clay.
Pupils' work.
Pupils' work.
Pupils* work.
School work, primary schools, school
work in grammar schools, school
work in high schools.
Pupils* work.
Drawings illustrating course in draw-
ing.
Portfolio of drawings and full line
of school work.
School work and drawings.
School work.
Bound volumes, photographs of
public schools and school work.
Framed photographs of school in-
terior and pupils' work.
School work.
Pupils' work.
School work of all kinds, charto,
photos, etc.
The public statistics and forms used
in administration and statistics.
Prang course of art education.
Work for eleven schools.
Three volumes, class work.
Two volumes, essays, botany, etc.
Illustration of college grounds, build-
ings, course of study, appliances
and results.
Case of statistical records, specimensof
work, catalogues, school work, etc
Photos of Williams College.
Papers from teachers' school of ser-
vice, collective exhibit.
Chemical papers.
Maps of grounds of college and full
line of college work.
Sloyd training school.
Pamphlete, photos, articles illustrat-
ing history.
Framed photos of Normal School and
work of studente.
Four volumes, class work and kinder-
garten work.
Class work and three volumes type-
writing.
216
BBPOBT OF BOARD OF
Oroup 160.
Namb.
Addsxss.
DBflCRIPnOH.
Silver, Bordett & Co., .
Boston,
Text books, charte, maps, etc
Boston AthenaBum,
Boston,
Library charging system.
Estes & Lanriat, .
Boston,
Books.
Ginn & Co., .
Boston,
Music, school books, charts, etc.
Houghton, Mifflin & Co.,
Boston,
Books, magazines, special exhibit
typh. illustrations.
Hall, Miss Mary L.,
Boston,
— —
Heath, D. C, & Co., .
Boston,
School books, charts, maps, etc.
Lothrop, D., &, Co.,
Boston,
Books, etc.
Library Bureau, .
Boston,
Tables, trucks, etc.
Merriam, 6. & C., Co., .
Springfield,
Webster's Dictionary.
New England Publish-
Boston,
•
School books and periodicals.
ing Co.
Prang, L., & Co., •
Boston,
Chromo-lithographic art prints.
Post, Alfred A., .
Boston,
Volapuk literature.
Plimpton, Geo. A.,
Boston,
Historical collection of school books.
Salem Public Library, .
Salem Press Publishing
and Printing Co. ana
Salem,
Books, catalogues, etc.
Salem,
Books, charts and engravings.
Essex Institute.
Wright, Julia McNair, .
Boston,
•
.
Books.
Oroup 161.
Blair Camera Co., .
Buff&Berger,
Boston Cash Register Co.,
Bichards, Robert H., .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Northampton, .
Boston, .
Photo, apparatus.
Surveyors^, engineers* instruments.
Self-calculating register.
Telescope.
Oroup 162.
Hayden, Sophia, .
Olmsted, Olmsted & Co.,
Peabody & Steams,
Peabody & Steams,
Peabody & Steams,
Wall, Wm. E.,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Somerville,
Woman's building.
Landscape architecture.
Colonnade of the Obelisk.
Massachusetts State Building.
Machinery Hall.
Graining.
Oroup 163.
United States Mailing
Case Co.
Wood screw cap mailing cases.
Oroup 164.
Bangs, C. H.,
L a m s o n Consolidated
Store Service Co.,
Standard Autograph
Time Recorder.
Drug store furnishings.
Cash carriers, mailing cases, etc.
Employee's time recorder.
WOBLD'S I<AIB MANAOBBS.
217
Oroup 166.
Name.
Addhkss.
Dbscrxption.
Boston Society of Home
Savings.
Massachusetts Co-opera-
tive Banks.
Boston, .
Boston, .
Charts.
Series of charts and publications.
Oroup 167.
United Society of Chris-
tian Endeavor.
Publication showing development
and progress of United Society of
Christian Endeavor.
Oroup 158.
Beach, Mrs. H. H. A., .
Boston,
Musical composition.
Bird, E. E., • • •
Boston,
Musical composition.
Bamette, Amos M. R., .
Boston,
Musical compositton.
Chickering & Sons,
Boston,
Pianos.
Crownlnshield, Mary
Boston,
Musical composition.
Bradford.
Downs, S. C,
Boston,
Musical composition.
Bitson, Oliver, Co.,
Boston,
Sheet music and music books.
Emerson, Elizabeth,
Boston,
Collection of songs.
Everett Piano Co.,
Boston,
Pianos.
Fyffe, B., . . .
Boston,
Musical composition.
Farley, Marian, .
Boston,
Song.
Musical composition.
Hood, Helen,
Boston,
Uale, Irene, .
Hallett & Davis Piano
Boston,
Song.
Boston,
Pianos.
Manufacturers.
Haynes, John C, & Co.,
Boston,
.
Musical instruments.
Leibetz, Moritz,
Boston,
Musical composition.
Lowing, Fraulein
Boston,
Musical composition.
Adelaid.
Lord, Anna L.,
Boston,
Musical composition.
Lang, N. £., .
Boston,
Musical composition.
Mason &. Rich,
Worcester,
Vocalion.
Mason & Hamlin Organ
Boston,
.
Pianos and organs.
and Piano Co.
McFarlane, Mrs. R.,
Boston,
Musical composition.
Prescott, Ella E., .
Boston,
Musical composition.
Roelfson, Mrs. Emily R.,
Rogers, Mrs. Clara K., .
Rene, B.,
Boston,
Musical composition.
Boston,
Musical composition.
-
Musical composition.
Rand, Josephine, .
Boston,
Method of singing.
Musical composition.
Spaulding, Florence A.,
Tooker, Minnie, .
Boston,
Boston,
Musical composition.
Vaughn, £. Elliott,
Boston,
Musical composition.
Vose & Sons, .
Boston,
Pianos.
Viardot, L. H.,
Boston,
Collection of songs.
Washburn & Moen Mfg.
Co.
Worcester,
Perfected ** steel piano wire.*
218
BBFOBT OF BOABB OF
APPENDIX D.
DEPARTMENT OF MINES AND MINING.
Group 42.
Nakx.
ADDBS88.
DsscBXpnoK.
Amherst College, •
Angell, C. L., . •
Brigham, George L.,
Bryant, Miss A. A.,
Boston Society of Natural
History.
Clark, Daniel, •
Conant, Dr. Thomas, •
Cotting, J. J., •
Cowles, E. L.,
Dayis, £. 6., . •
Davis Snlphur Ore Co.,
Emerson, Charles B., •
Fletcher, Miss Emily, .
Gardner, John L., .
Hobbs, Dr. W. H.,
Harvard University,
Johnson, Charles, •
Kennedy, Harris, .
Litchfield, Silas, .
liQcas, Dr. H. S., •
Mada, Elis, .
Osgood, Alfred,
Peabody Academy of
Science.
Richmond Iron Works,
Bockport Granite Co., .
Sands, H. H.,
State of Massachusetts,
Steams, Cliarles A.,
Stevens, A. L., •
Amherst, .
Huntington, •
Bolton, •
Mansfield,
Bridgewater, .
Tyringham, .
Gloucester,
Fitchburg,
Chester, •
Leominster, .
Davis,
Bradford,
Westford,
Boston, .
Madison, Wis.,
Cambridge,
Easthampton, .
Rozbury,
Fitchburg,
Chester, •
Chester, •
Newburyport, .
Salem, •
Richmond,
Rockport,
New York City,
Boston, •
Mansfield
kn.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough, fossils.
Auriferous iron pyrites.
Calamite.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Micaceous ilmenite, limonite, crystals,
amazonstone, orthoclase.
Hornblende, muscovite.
Ilmenite, crystal quartz, garnet,
zoisite.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Iron pyrites, fossils.
Galena with chalcopjrite.
Collection of minerals and gems.
Prehnite.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Collection of fossils.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Micaceous hematite, rhodonite,
prehnite.
Beryl, tourmaUne.
Magnetite, diaspore, comndophilite.
Collection of ores and gems In the
rough.
Galena with chalcopyrite.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Limonite.
Molybdenite, amazonstone, smoky-
quartz.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Barite.
"WOBLD'S FAIB MAKAGBBS.
219
Oroup 42 — Concluded.
Namk.
ADDRBfla.
Dbscriftiok.
Stockbridge Iron Co., .
West stock-
bridge.
Limonite*
Stonghton, T. M., .
Tumer^s Falls,
Fossils.
Tarr, R. S., .
Gloucester,
Molybdenite, opal, amethyst, ortho-
clase, amazonstone.
Thatcher, A. R., .
Haydensville, .
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Weeks, H. A.,
Chesterfield, .
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Whittle, C. L.,
Cambridge,
Collection of ores and gems in the
rough.
Wood worth, J. B.,
Cambridge,
Melanolite.
Worcester Polytechnic
Worcester,
Collection of ores and associated
Institute.
minerals.
Group
43.
Northwestern Land &
Boston, .
Compound to promote combustion
Coal Co.
of coal.
Woodworth, J. B.,
Cambridge,
Anthracite coal.
Group
44.
Amherst College, .
Amherst, .
Schist.
Badger Bros.,
Quincv, .
Granite.
Beattie, Wm., & Sons, .
Blanchard, W. D.,
Fall River,
Granite.
Leominster,
Granite.
Cape Ann Granite Co., .
Bav View,
Milford, .
Granite.
Darling Bros.,
Granite.
Jletcher Bros.,
Chelmsford, .
Granite.
Fly ant Granite Co.,
Monson, .
Granite.
Granite Manufacturers*
Quincy, .
Granite.
Association.
Gross Bros., •
xjce, . • •
Marble.
Hathaway, Prof. F. R.,
Winchendon, .
Granite and schist.
Hobbs, Dr. W. H.,
Madison, Wis.,
Gneiss, schist, marble, quartzitOy
limestone and shale.
Hudson & Chester
Chester, .
Granite.
Granite Co.
Kane & Jjearv,
Fitchburg,
Granite.
Kittredge & Leavitt
* Granite Co.
Leominster,
Gneiss granite.
Lanesville Granite Co.,
Lanesville,
Granite.
Merrill, J. A.,
(.arabridge.
Gneiss and slate.
Middlesex Marble Co.,
Boston, .
Marble.
McCauliff, J.,
Fitchburg,
Granite.
Milford Pmk Granite
Co.
Munson, J. C,
Milford, .
Granite.
Van Deusen-
Marble.
ville.
Norcross Bros.,
Worcester,
Granite and sandstone.
Peabody Academy of
Salem, •
Granite, syenite, felsite breccia and
Science.
hornblende.
Pumpelly, R.,
New Marl-
borough.
Conglomerate gneiss.
Rand & Co., .
North Adams, .
Marble.
220
EEPOBT OF BOABD OF
Oroup AA^ Oonduded.
Navr.
AoDRsas.
Rockport Granite Co., •
Rockport,
Granite.
State of Massachusetts, .
Granite, angite, syenite, felsite,
breccia, porphyries, gneiss, marble,
serpentine, soapstone, conglomer-
ate, schist, limestone, sandstone,
etc.
Trnesdell & Fnarey,
West Stock-
bridge.
Marble.
WhitUe, C. L.,
Cambridge,
Slate.
Group 46.
Amherst College, •
Amherst, . •
Comndnm crystals.
Clark, Daniel,
Tyringham, •
Emery.
Lncas, Dr. H. S., .
Chester, .
Margarite with emery and comndnm.
Macia, Ells, .
Chester, .
Emery, margarite with emery.
State of Massachusetts, .
—
Emery.
Weeks, H. A.,
Chesterfield, .
Comndnm crystals.
Whittle. C. L.,
Cambridge,
Emery and comndnm.
Group
46.
Amherst College, .
Amherst, .
Graphite.
Kaolinite.
Blandford Brick & TUe
Co.
Clark, Daniel,
Boston, •
Tyringham, .
Kaolinite.
Davis, E. G., .
I^Aominster,
Madison, Wis.,
Graphite.
Hobbs, Dr. W. H.,
Asbestos.
Phoenix Mfg. Co., .
Tannton, .
Cmcibles.
State of Massachusetts, .
—
a Kaolinite. 6 Tale and steatite.
0 Asbestos.
Weeks, H. A.,
Chesterfield, .
Graphite.
Worcester Polytechnic
Worcester,
Graphite.
Institnte.
Group 40.
Howe, Henry M.,
Steel, illustrating e£fect of heat treat-
ment.
Group 61.
Amherst College, .
Clark, Daniel,
Davis Sulphur Ore Co., .
State of Massachusetts, .
Amherst, .
Tyringham,
Davis, .
Copper pyrites in schist.
Copper pyrites.
Copper pyrites.
Copper pyrites.
Group 68.
MacEjiy, H. S., •
Electric drill for stone qnajrying,
electric stone-carving machines.
WOBLD'8 FAIB HANAOBRS.
221
Group
61.
Nawb.
Adobxss.
Dbscriptiok.
MacKay, H. S., .
Boston, .
Electric drill for mining.
Group 63.
Bradley Fertilizer Co., .
Boston, .
Elevator for rolling mUl.
Group 64.
Bradley Fertilizer Co., .
Stnrtevant Mill Co.,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Roller mills.
Mill for crushing and grinding ore
and other material.
Group 67.
Honghton, Mifflin & Co.,
Stnrtevant Mill Co.,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Books on coal mining and geology.
Model of mill.
Group 68.
Lynn, City of.
-
First iron casting ever made In Amer-
ica.
DEPARTMENT OF MANUFACTURES.
Group 87.
Bnmett, Jos., & Co., 27
Central Street.
India Alkali Works, 75
Broad Street.
Boston, .
Boston, •
Flavoring extracts, etc.
Alkalies and alkaUne earths.
Group 88.
Boston Blacking Co., .
Dexter Bros., 55 Broad
Street.
Gondolo Tannin Co., •
Mitchell Stain Mfg. Co.,
Boston, •
Boston, •
Boston, .
Lynn, •
Blacking, dressing, cement, etc.
Shingle stains.
Oak wood and chestnut tannin.
Bottom finishings, stains for shoes.
222
BBPORT OF BOABD OF
Group 88 — Ocmcluded.
Kamb.
Address.
Dbscriptiov.
White, S. A., 65 High
Street.
Whiting, John L., & Son,
Boston, .
»
Blackings, dressings and stains.
Boston, .
•
Brashes.
High and Pnrchaae
Streets.
Whittemore, Bros. & Co.,
Boston, •
•
Harness dressings, boot and shoe
237 Albany Street.
•
blacking.
Wiggin & Stevens, .
Maiden, .
•
Sandpaper.
Wood, Geo. H., Co.,
Boston, •
»
Cements, inks, wax and dressings.
Woods, Henry, Sons
Boston, .
•
Paints and colors.
Co., 436 Atlantic Ave-
nne.
Group 80.
Brown, L. L., Paper Co.,
Crane Bros., .
Crane, Z. & W. M.,
Crane & Co., .
Franklin Typewriter, 76
Milk Street,
Hnrlbnt Paper Mfg. Co.,
Mills, Knight & Co., 60
Pearl Street.
Weston, Byron,
Whiting Paper Co.,
Williston, A. Lyman, .
Adams, .
Westfield,
Dalton, .
Dalton, .
Boston, .
South Lee,
Boston, .
Dalton, •
Holyoke, .
Northampton, .
Ledger and record paper.
Linen, record and writing paper.
Writing paper and stationery.
Bank note and parchment paper,
"typewriters ana supplies.
Writing paper and envelopes.
Fancy leather work.
Ledger and record paper.
Paper, envelopes, etc.
Indelible ink.
Group 90.
Derby & Kilmer Desk
Boston, .
Office furniture.
Co., 93 Causeway
Street.
«
Metropolitan Air Goods
Boston, .
Air mattresses, cushions, etc.
Co., 7 Temple Place.
Plympton, H. R., & Co.,
1077 Washington
Boston, .
Sofas and bed lounges.
Street.
Group 91.
Fiske, Homes & Co.,
Hills, C. M., .
Low Art Tile Co., .
Boston, .
Cambridge,
Chelsea, .
Bricks and terra ootta.
Painted china.
Art tiles.
Group 92.
Granite Manufacturers'
Association.
Quincy, •
Granite monnmentB.
WOKLiyS FAIB MAKAOBBS.
223
Oroup
96.
Namk.
ADDSKSa.
Dbscbiptioh.
Continental StainedOlass
Works, 440 Tremont
Street.
Boflton, •
Stained glass.
Oroup
•
97.
Pairpoint Mfg. Co.,
Tufts, Jas. W.,
New Bedford, .
Boston, .
Silver-plated ware.
Silver-plated ware.
Oroup
98.
Blackington, W. & S., .
Child, D. R., & Co.,
Simmons, R. F., & Co.,
Attleborough, .
North Swansea,
North Attle-
borongh.
Plated chains.
Cuff and collar buttons.
Jewelry.
Oroup 99.
American W a 1 1 h a m
Watch Co.
Waltham,
Watch movements-
Oroup lOO.
McCnllnm, Constable
Hosiery Co.
Nonotack Silk Co.,
Skinner, Wm., Mfg. Co.,
Holyoke, .
Florence, Leeds,
HaydenvUle.
Holyoke, .
Silk hosiery. .
Machine twist, underwear.
Serges, linings and braids.
Oroup
102.
Appleton Co., 48 Frank-
lin Street.
Boston, .
Eider downs, shirtings, etc.
Arlington Mffls, .
•
lAwrence,
Fine cotton, single or twisted.
Bamabv Mfg. Co.,
Clarendon Mills, .
•
Fall River,
Zephyr ginghams.
•
West Boylston,
Crocheted quilts.
Clifton Mfg. Co., .
.
Boston, .
Brown cottons.
Conanicnt Mills, .
•
Fall River,
Cambric muslins.
Davol Mills, • •
•
Fall River,
Bleached muslins.
Dwight Mills,
.
Chicopee,
Brown, bleached cottons, etc
Fisher Mfg. Co., .
.
Fisherville,
Woven cotton goods.
Finlayson, Bonsfield
Co.
Glasgow Co., .
&
North Grafton,
Threads for shoes and leather.
.
South Hadley
Cotton goods and ginghams.
Falls.
Globe Tarn Mills, .
•
Fall River,
Cotton yams.
224
REPOBT OF BOARD OP
Qroup 102^ CbncluiUd,
Xxm.
ADDBK8S.
DsacsipnoBr.
Hadley Co., .
Knitted Mattress Co., .
Holyoke,.
Canton Junc-
tion.
Boston, ..
Boston, •
Holyoke,
Boston, •
Boston, .
Salem,
Cotton yams and threads.
Cotton fabrics.
Lancaster Mills, 48
Franklin Street.
Leeson, J. R., & Co., 226
Deyonshire Street.
Lvman Mills, •
Merrimack Mfg. Co., 87
Milk Street.
Methuen Co., .
Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Co.
Pacific Mills, .
Pemberton Co., . .
Sanford Spinning Co., .
Stevens Linen works, .
Wamsutta Mills, .
Whittenton Mfg. Co., .
Woods, Joseph W., &
Sons.
Ginghams.
Threads for boots and leather.
Brown and bleached cottons, etc
Printed cotton goods.
Fancy cotton fabrics, etc
Satteens, cotton goods, etc
Lawrence,
Boston, .
Fall River,
Boston, .
New Bedford, .
Taunton, .
Boston, '.
Cotton fabrics.
Cotton fabrics.
Cotton yams.
Linen crash.
Sheetings, fine white goods, etc
Colored cotton fabrics.
Colored and printed cotton goods.
Group 108.
Arlington Mills, •
Assabet Mfg. Co., .
Ballardvale Mills, .
Belvidere Woolen Mfg.
Co.
Berkeley Woolen Co., .
Blackington, S., Woolen
Co.
Blackstone Woolen Co.,
Calumet Woolen Co., .
Carlton, E. G., & Sons, .
City Mills Co.,
Clinton Worsted Co., .
Connor Bros., •
Farr Alpaca Co., .
French & Wud, .
Germania Mills, •
Hartley, F., .
Heda Mills, .
Massachusetts Mohair
Plush Co.
Merrimack Woolen
Mills.
North Adams Mfg.
Co.
Pacific Mills, .
Saxon Worsted Co.,
Stevens, Charles A., &
Co.
Sterling Mills,
Talbot MUls, .
Washington Mills Co.,.
Lawrence, •
Mavnard,
Ballardvale, .
Lowell, •
Wales, .
North Adams, .
Blackstone,
Uxbridge,
Rochdale,
City Mills,
Clinton, •
Holyoke, •
Holyoke, .
West Stough-
ton.
Holyoke, .
Lawrence, .
Uxbridge,
Boston, .
Dracnt, • •
North Adams, .
Lawrence,
Franklin,
Ware,
Lowell, .
North Billerica,
lAwrenoe,
Worsted yams, dress goods, etc.
Fancy fiannels, suitings, etc
Woollen yams, flannels.
Flannel and woollen dress goods.
Fine kerseys and meltons.
Fancy cassimeres, etc.
Cassimeres. fine kerseys.
Fancy woollen cassimeres.
Flannels and woollen goods.
Felt goods.
Worsted suitings.
Beavers, etc.
Worsted goods, etc
Blankets, flannels, etc
Beavers, kerseys, etc
Yam and carbonized wool.
Woollen goods.
Mohair plush.
Cloakings, dress goods, etc
Fancy cassimeres.
Wool dress fabrics.
Fancy worsted.
White and worsted yams, etc
Woollens, flannels, etc
Woollen goods, etc
Woollen and worsted yams, etc
WOKLD'S FAIR MANAOEBS.
226
Qroup 104.
Namx.
ADDSE88.
Descbiptioh.
Abom, C. H.y
Lynn, .
Ladies' boots and shoes.
Amesbory Shoe Co.,
Amesbury,
Shoes and slippers.
Anderson, J. F., .
Boston, .
Full dress coat and waistcoat.
Ash, Wm. T.,
Lynn,
Shoes and slippers.
Bartlett, Jno., & Co., .
Batcheller, £. & A.
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Boston, .
Boots and shoes.
H., Co., 106 Summer
Street.
Blake, Harold F., .
Haverhill,
Shoe tips.
Bridgeport & Hub Oore
Boston, .
Elastic for shoes.
Makers.
Coburn, Geo. M., & Co.,
Boston, .
Shoes and slippers.
22 High Street.
Consolidated Adjustable
Lynn,
Ladies* boots and shoes.
Shoe Co.
Davis, Geo. C,
Lynn,
Ladies' boots and shoes.
Faunce & Spinney,
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Flynt, Mrs. 0. P., .
Boston, .
Corsets and waists.
Fox, Chas. E.,
Haverhill,
Shoes and slippers.
Fuller, Geo., & Co.,
Lynn,
Haverhill,
Welts, turns, boots and shoes.
Goodrich, Hazen B.,
Boots, shoes, slippers.
Greenman, Chas. £., .
HaverhiU,
Soles and leather.
Grovers, J. J., Sons,
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Harney Bros.,
Herrick, G. W., &
Co.
Hoag & Heath,
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Hodgkins & Hodgkins, .
Hollander, L. P., &
Co.
Hub Gore Makers,
Boston, .
Grentleman's hunting suit.
Boston, •
Boys' clothing.
Boston, .
Elastic for shoes.
Hutchinson, F. £.,
HaverhiU,
liadies' shoes and slippers.
Messenger Bros. &
Boston, .
Double-breast box driving ooat.
Jones.
Morse Bros. & Co.,
Haverhill,
Shoes and slippers.
Murphv Bros.,
New Home Sewing Ma-
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Orange, .
Sewing machines.
chine Co.
New York Shoe Mfg.
Co.
Plant, Thos. G., .
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Lynn,
Ladies' boots and shoes.
Benton, J. B.,
Lynn,
Heels and lifts.
Rice & Hutchins, .
Boston, •
Boots and shoes.
Rumsey Bros.,
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Shillaber & Co., .
Lynn,
Women's boots and shoes.
Smith, A. F., .
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Somers, Frank D.,
Boston, .
Double-breasted frock coat.
Sutherland, D. A.,
Lynn,
Boots and shoes, ties, etc.
Swain, J. F., & Co.,
Lynn,
Misses' and children's boots and
shoes.
Turner, J. S., . •
Rockland,
Men's shoes.
Wankenhose Co., 76
Channcy Street.
Williams, Clarke &
Co.
Woodman & Howes,
Boston, .
Knit goods.
Lynn,
Boots and shoes.
Haverhill,
Shoes and suppers.
Worcester Corset Co., .
Worcester,
Corsets.
Wright & Richards,
Rockland,
Boots and shoes.
226
SBPOBT OF BOARD OF
Oroup 106.
Kavk.
Addbbsb.
DxSCSIPTIOlff.
Ball and Socket Fastener
Co., 58 Snmmer Street.
Boston, .
Fasteners for glores, etc.
Oroup 109.
American Rubber Co., .
Bailey, C. J., & Co., 22
Boylston Street.
Boston Robber Shoe Co.,
245 Causeway Street.
Elastic Tip, .
Stoughton Rubber Co.,
44 Summer Street.
Towers, A. J., 18 Sum-
mer Street.
Cambridgeport,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Mackintoshes, rubber clothing, etc
Rubber brushes and novelties.
Rubber boots and shoes, curios from
South America.
Rubber specialties.
Rubber garments.
Waterproof clothing.
Group llO.
Converse, Morton £., &
Co.
Parker Bros., .
'Winchendon, .
Salem, •
Toys and novelties.
Games.
Qroup 111.
Gordon, S. J., 224 Fre-
Boston, .
Fancy leather goods.
mont Street.
Harwood, Chas. E., Co.,
Lynn,
Counters, insoles, taps, turns, shanks,
etc
Soles and leather.
Hillard, R. E.,
Lynn,
Kent & Smith,
Lynn,
Various kinds and colors of shcM
stains.
Eistler, Lesh & Co., 97
Boston, .
Sole leather.
South Street.
Shaw Leather Co., 159
Boston, .
Grain split and calf leather and shoes
Sununer Street.
of same.
Smith's, Lyman, Sons
Co.
Stiles & Winslow, .
Norwood,
Sheep and lamb skin, linings, etc
Boston, .
Colored morocco, goat and sheep
skin.
Qroup 118.
Snuth & Wesson, •
Springfield,
Pistols and revolvers.
Oroup 115.
Magee Furnace Co., 38
Union Street.
Boston, .
Furnaces, stoves and ranges.
WOBLD'S FAIB MANAOEBS.
227
Oroup 116 — C&neiudsd.
Namb.
Addrbss.
DBBCRIPTIOir.
Bidgewaj Furnace Co.,
76 Union Street.
Smith & Anthony Stove
Co.
Woods, Sherwood & Co.,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Lowell, .
Fnmaoes.
Heaters, ranges, fnmaoes.
White wire household goods.
Oroup lie.
Low Art Tile Co., •
Pnfitdr, A. D., & Sons, .
Smith & Anthony Stove
Co.
Tufts, J. W.,
Chelsea, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Soda fountain.
Soda water apparatus.
Kettles.
Soda water apparatus.
Oroup 117.
ainton Wire Cloth Co.,
Translucent Fabric Co.,
Washburn &Moen Mfg.
Co.
Clinton, •
Clinton, •
Worcester,
Wire of all kinds.
Translucent fabrics for windows.
Wire of all kinds.
Oroup 118.
Desmond, Cornelius,
Hogan, John,
Putnam Nail Co., •
Pittsfleld,
Fitchbnrg,
Boston, .
Horseshoes.
Horseshoes.
Horseshoe nails.
Oroup 110.
Ames, Oliver, Sons Cor-
poration
Atlas Tack Corporation,
Barney & Berry, .
Blount Mfg. Co., 180
Washington Street.
Buck Bros., • •
Buck, Chas., .
Norton Door Check and
Spring Co., 605 Sears
Building.
Snell Mfg. Co., .
Torrey, J. R., Razor Co.,
North Easton, .
Boston, .
Springfield,
Boston, .
Millbury,
Millbury,
Boston, •
Fiskdale, .
Worcester,
Shovels, spades, etc
Tacks, brads, etc.
Ice and roller skates.
Hardware specialties.
Light edge tools.
Edge tools.
Door check and spring doon.
Boring tools.
Razors.
Oroup 120.
Smith & Anthony Stove
Co.
Water-closets, etc.
228
KEPORT OP BOARD OP
Group 121.
Naxk.
Adorkss.
DEacRiPTioir.
Brown, Mrs. Hurriet A.,
Meyers Pntz Pomade Co.,
271 Franklin Street.
Steams, Mrs. B. A.,
White, Otis C, 150
Beacon Street.
Boston, .
Boston, .
Wobnm, .
Boston, .
Rale for dressmaking.
Liquid metal polish.
Dress-cnttinff system.
Ball-and-socket cone joints.
DEPARTMENT OF MACHINERY.
Oroup 60.
Ashton Valve Co.,
Chapman ValTe Mfg.
Co.
Deane Steam Pmnp Co.,
Fales, Edward,
Oraton & Knight, .
Heath, Laban, & Co., .
Hersey Mfg. Co., .
Morse Rotary Engine
Co.
Puffer, A. D.. & Sons, .
Richardson, Charles H.,
Secco, Henri, .
Steele, E. B., .
Tufts, James W., .
Walworth Mfg. Co., .
Boston, .
Indian Orchard,
Holyoke, .
Boston, •
Worcester,
Boston, .
South Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Gloucester,
Boston, .
Marlborough, .
Boston, .
Boston, •
Valves and gauges.
Steam yalves.
Pumps.
Grate bars.
Belting.
Water shut-off machine.
Pumps.
Engine.
Soda water machinery.
Ice crusher.
Lifting jack.
Derrick.
Soda water machinery.
Valves, cocks, etc.
Oroup 70.
Cobum Trolley Track
Mfg. Co.
Holyoke,
Store ladders, fire escapes, etc.
Oroup 71.
American Improved
Wrench Co.
Beaudry Tool Co.,
Brainard Milling Ma-
chine Co.
Eaton, Geo. H., & Co., .
Hurlbut, Rogers Ma-
chine Co.
Morse Twist Drill and
Machine Co.
Prentice Bros.,
Reed, F. E., & Co.,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Hyde Park,
Boston, .
South Sudbuiy,
New Bedford, .
Worcester,
Worcester,
Metal-working machines.
Power hammers and forging presses.
Milling machines.
Presses and shears for working sheet
metal.
Cntting-off lathes.
Machinist tools.
Metal-working machines.
Lathes.
WORLD'S FAIR MAXAOBBS.
229
Group
72.
Naxb.
Addrkss.
Dkscbiptios.
American Heeling Ma-
Brockton,
Lightning heeling machine.
chine Co.
Bertrand Lock Stitch
Boston, .
Sewing machines.
Sewing Machine Co.
Brett, Henry W., .
Boston, .
Shoe-upper cementing machine.
Cheney Bigelow "Wire
Springfield,
Wire for paper-making.
Works.
Crompton Loom Works,
Worcester,
Looms of many kinds.
Fenno, Isaac,
Boston, .
Cloth-cutting machine.
Olobe.Bnflbr Co., •
Boston, .
Shoe machinery.
Goodyear Shoe Manu-
Boston, .
Shoe machines.
facturing Co.
Kitson Machine Co.,
Lowell, .
Cotton goods machine.
Knowles Loom Works, .
Worcester,
Looms of many kinds.
Lowell Machine Shop, .
Lowell, .
Cotton goods machine.
Lnfkin, R. H.,
Boston, .
Vamp-folding machine.
McKay Metallic Fasten-
Boston, .
Shoe machinery.
ing Association.
McKay & Bigelow,
Nanmkeag Buffing Ma-
Boston, •
Shoe machinery.
Beverly, .
Shoe machinery.
chine Association.
Reece Button Hole Ma-
Boston, •
Shoe machinery.
chine Co.
Sawyer Leather Ma-
Boston,
Machine for measuring leather.
chinery Co.
Stanley Mfg. Co., .
Boston, .
Shoe machinery.
Standard Rivet Co.,
Boston, .
Rivets and machines for driving
Steele, A. H.,
Worcester,
sanie.
Weaving baton shuttles, etc.
Tubular Rivet Co.,
Boston, •
Rivets and rivet-setting machine.
Union Heel Trimmer
Co.
Vaughn Machinery Co..
Boston, •
Boot and shoe heel trinmiing machine.
Salem,
Hide and leather machinery.
Wire Grip Fastening Co.,
Boston, .
Slugging and nailing machines.
Group
73.
E. G. Cunningham,
Worcester,
•
Band-saw blades and jig saws, filing,
setting and brazing machines.
Simonds Mfg. Co.,
S. A. Woods Machine
Co.
Fitchburg,
•
Saws and machine knives.
Boston, .
•
Wood-working machinery.
Group
74.
Elliot Machine Co.,
Newton, .
•
Thread-stitching machine.
Golding & Co.,
Boston, .
•
Printing presses and paper folders.
Mclndoe Bros.,
Boston, •
•
Cylinder printing presses.
Group
77.
Faneuil Watch Tool Co.,
Boston, •
•
Watchmakers' lathes.
Hersey Mfg. Co., .
Boston, .
•
Soap machinery.
Norton Emery Wheel
Co.
Worcester,
•
Emery wheels.
230
HEPOBT OF BOABD OF
Oroup 77 —
Ckmeluded.
Naxk.
Addbxss.
Dtactamov.
Northampton Emery
Wheel Co.
J. A. W. Seabnry Ma-
chine Co.
Maiden, .
Emery wheels.
Laundry machines.
Group 70.
Hersey Mfg. Co., .
Boston, .
Cnbe sugar machine.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.
Group 1.
J. W. Allen, .
Amherst, .
Com.
Geo. L. Averill,
North Andover,
Com.
Wm. L. Bancroft, .
Chesterfield, .
Com.
Henry Barlow & Sons, .
Peru,
Wheat.
Edwin Bates, .
Lynn,
Com.
John B. Benton, .
Barre,
Com.
Albert Berry, .
North Andover,
Com.
J. R. & D. F. Bigelow, .
Petersham,
Com and oats.
Charles A. Bimie, .
Longmeadow, .
Corn.
Wm. L. Boutwell, .
Leverett, .
South Egre-
Com.
Ralph H. Bradford,
Buckwheat.
mont.
C. L. Buell, .
Ludlow, .
Com.
Leon M. Bnsby, •
Monterey,
Com.
G. H. Carpenter, .
South Hadley,
Grasses.
Oliver Cowles,
Amherst, • .
Com.
Samner Crabtree, .
Natick, .
Com.
Walter L. Cutting,
Pittsfield,
Com, oats, grasses and buckwheat.
Com, oats, barley and grasses.
Amos Deming,
Geo. H. Dewolf, .
Savov,
Mention, .
Com.
F. M. Dickinson & Son,
Belchertown, .
Com.
J. C. Dillon, .
Amherst, .
Com.
Wm. H. Dodge, .
Cheshire, .
Com.
Charles W. Fairbanks, .
Claremont,
Com.
£. N. Fisher, .
Ludlow, .
Com.
Albert J. Flanders,
Chilmark,
Com.
D. Frissell & Sons,
Peru,
Wheat, oats, barley and buckwheat.
Homer Frissell,
Peru,
Oats.
John Frissell,
Peru,
Barley.
John Z. Frissell, .
Peru,
Oats.
Mrs. M. T. Goddard, .
Newton, .
Com.
J. F. Gulliver,
Andover, .
Com.
Monroe Hayward, .
Agawam,
Com.
Geo. W. Holcomb,
Chester, .
Oats.
C. A. Judd, .
South Hadley,
Com.
Frank N. Kellogg,
Sheffield, .
Rye.
G. L. Kent, .
Belchertown, •
Corn and buckwheat.
G. S. Kent, .
Belchertown, .
Oats and grasses.
S. K. Kindley,
Spencer, .
Grass.
•
Note. — The awards in Group 1 in the Department of Agriculture have not as yet
been announced.
WORLD'S FAIB ICANAOBBS.
231
Oroup l — Oonelud4d.
Naxe.
Addrkss.
Bkscriptioh.
H. H. Kinsley, .
C. B. Larkin, .
Charles Lawton, .
Spencer Leonard, •
F. W. Lincoln,
H. W. Lincoln,
Andrew S. Longfellow, .
MassachnsettB Agri-
cnltnral College.
Wm. W. Mcintosh,
N. Clark Newton,
H. W. Nichols,
L. T. Osborne,
Geo. M. Parker,
Jerome Pease,
Martin A. Phelps,
F. L. Plantlflf,
Preston Pratt,
Eugene Randall,
N. Randall & Son,
A. A. Randall,
Geo. A. Rogers,
Patrick Ryan,
H. O. Sanderson,
E. B. Sanford,
Asa Smith,
C. K. Smith, .
H. B. Smith & Son
Newton Smith,
E. S. Squires,
C. £. Stebbins,
M. H. Trier, .
Edward warren,
F. R. Williams,
Spencer, •
Bnckland,
Lererett, .
Bridgewater, .
Oakham, •
Oakham, .
Oroveland,
Amherst, .
Nantucket,
North Hadley,
Sturbridge,
Alford, .
New Lenox, .
Wilbraham, .
Blandford,
Belchertown, .
South Wey-
mouth.
Belchertown, .
Belchertown, .
Mendon, .
North Andover,
North Hadley,
Sunderland, .
Belchertown, .
Chilmark,
Sunderland, .
Chesterfield, .
South Hadley,
Worthington, .
South Deer-
fleld.
Oreenfield,
Spencer, .
Sunderland, .
Orass.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Rye.
Com and buckwheat.
Cora.
Com and rye.
Corn and oats.
Cora.
Oats, barley and rye.
Cora.
Com and oats.
Com and oats.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Com and barley.
Com.
Cora.
Com.
Com.
Oats and buckwheat.
Wheat, com, oats, barley and rye.
Com.
Com.
Com.
Oroup 2.
Middleby Oven Co.,
Boston, •
Ovens.
Group 3.
Parker Hubbard, .
The Walter M. Lowney
Co.
Sunderland, .
Boston, .
Maple sugar.
Chocolate bonbons.
Group 4.
Milford H. Clarke,
H. C. Comegus,
W. A. French,
E. R. Gunn, .
F. J. Kumey,
Charles Lawton,
C. S. Smith, .
Sunderland,
Hadley, .
Petersham,
So. Deerfleld,
Worcester,
Leverett, •
Amherst, .
Onions.
Potatoes.
Potatoes.
Onions.
Potatoes.
Onions.
Potatoes.
232
KBPOBT OF BOABD OF
Oroup 6.
ITamb.
Addrbbs.
Dbscbiptiov.
Alvan Barrnsy
J. B. & D. F. Bigelow, .
H. L. & I. B. Salmon, .
Curtis Whipple,
Goshen, .
Petersham,
Richmond,
Charlemont, .
Beans.
Beans.
Beans.
Beans.
Oroup 6.
The B. T. Cowdrey Co.,
J. H. W. Hnckins & Co.,
North Packing and Pro-
Tision Co.
Devilled ham and sonps.
Sandwich meats and canned soups.
Dried beef, hams and bacon, salted
meats, tongaes, tripe, etc.
Oroup 7.
Simpson, Mclntire & Co.,
Upton Kfg. Co., .
Boston, .
West Upton,
Bntter in sealed tins.
Milk aerator.
Oroup 8.
Walter Baker & Co., .
Dorchester,
Chocolate and cocoa.
JohnBrell, .
Hadley, .
Leaf tobacco.
Clark Coffee Co., .
Boston, .
Combination of cocoa and coffee.
C. F. Fowler, .
Westfield,
Leaf tobacco.
Cephas Oraves,
Sunderland, .
Leaf tobacco.
N. Clark Newton, .
North Hadley,
Leaf tobacco.
H. I. Searle, .
Charles Shiderton, .
Northampton, .
Leaf tobacco.
Hadley, .
Leaf tobacco.
Oroup 0.
Chase Cotton Qln Co., .
Eagle Cotton Oin Co., .
National Cotton Gin and
Wool Bnrrer Co.
Milford, .
Bridgewater, .
Boston, .
Cotton gins.
Cotton gins.
Cotton gins and wool burrers.
Oroup 11.
Cnshing Process Co., .
Boston, .
Bonrbon and lye whiskeys, ram and
brandy.
Oroup le.
Sherman R. Nye, .
Chicopee Falls,
Horse rake.
Oroup 17.
Crystal Gelatine Co., .
North Packing and Pro-
vision Co.
Boston, .
Boston, .
Gelatine.
Fertilizer.
WOBLD'S FAIK MANAOBBS.
233
Group 18.
Naxx.
ADDKiaS.
North Packing and Pro-
yision Co.
Boston, .
Lard.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION.
Group 80.
Acme Railway Appliance
Co.
Ashton Valve Co.,
F. W. Bird ^ Son,
Bnmham & Dnggan
Railway Appliance Co.
Bnrton Stock Car Co., .
Cobom Trolley Track
Mfg. Co.
Eastman Freight Car
Heater Co.
Jewett Supply Co.»
W. B. Merrill & Co., .
A. O. Norton,
Old Colony Railroad Co.,
Reinforced Rail Joint
Co.
Rowell Potter Safety
Stop Co.
Boston, .
Boston, .
East Walpole, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Holyoke, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Electric train-signal apparatus.
Locomotiye safety yalres and gauges.
Waterproof fabrics for roofing rail-
way cars.
Switches, chairs, etc.
Horse and cattle cars.
Hangers and fixtures for door cars.
Refrigerator, heater and ventilator
cars.
Car body and truck bolsters, anti-
friction device, elevated railway.
Metallic packing.
Track and screw jacks.
Passenger locomotive and coach, coal
car, locomotive built in 1868, coach
built in 1835.
Rail joints.
Safety stop and block-signal system,
intermural railway.
Group 81.
A. & J. M. Anderson, .
Bumham & Duggan
Railway Appliance
Co.
A. O. Norton,
Reliable Mfg. Co., .
Robinson Electric Truck
and Supply Co.
Suspension Transporta-
tion Co.
Boston
Boston
9 •
Boston
Boston
Boston
Boston,
Electric railway switches, fixtures.
Trolley-wire brackets and insulators.
Jacks for street and electric cars.
Street railway supplies, heaters, etc
Radial system.
Elevated electric system of trans-
portation.
Group 88.
Amesbury Carriage Co.,
S. R. Bailey & Co.,
Biddle & Smart Co.,
Boston & Lockport Block
Co.
Briggs Carriage Co.,
Bradshaw Mfg. Co.,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Amesbury,
Boston, .
Amesbury,
Boston, .
Pleasure carriages.
Light pleasure vehicles.
Light pleasure vehicles.
Railroad trucks.
Large pleasure wagons, light pleasure
vehicles.
Bicycles.
234
BEFORT OF BOARD OF
Group 83—
Ckmeiudsd.
Kami.
Addkbss.
DsscHipnov.
J. T. Clarkson & Co., .
Amesbory,
Pleasore carriages.
Eben N. Cnrrier, .
Amesbnry,
Boggy.
Folffer & Drninmond, .
N. fi. Folger, .
Hickory wheel Co.,
Amesbory,
Traps.
Amesbory,
Cotonder.
Newton, .
Solkies and bicycles.
Lambert Hollander,
Amesbory,
Rockaways.
Miller Bros., .
Amesbory,
Brake.
Osgood Morrill,
Amesbory,
Traps.
Light pleasore yehicles.
Neal & Bolser,
Amesbory,
Overman Wheel Co., .
Chicopee Falls,
Bicycles.
Charles A. Palmer,
Amesbory,
Broogham.
A. N. Parry & Co.,
Amesbory,
Brake and wagons.
Pope Mfg. Co.,
Wm. Read & Sons,
Boston, .
Bicycles and parts.
Boston, .
Bicycles.
Samnel Rowell & Son, .
Amesbory,
Traps.
John H. Shields & Co., .
Amesbory,
Phaeton.
Simonds Rolling Ma-
Fitchborg,
Rolled forged steel specialties.
chine Co.
United States Whip Co.,
Westfleld,
Whips and lashes.
Warwick Cycle Mfg. Co.,
^
Safety bicycles.
Oroup 84.
Cobom Trolley Track
Mfg. Co.
Miles Pneomatic Tobe
Co.
Holyoke, .
Boston, .
Carrying track for overhead tram-
way.
Pneomatic parcel, cash and mail
tobes, pneomatic elevators.
Oroup
85.
Ashton Valve Co.,
Boston, .
Marine safety valves and ganges.
Cape Ann Anchor Works,
C. E. Doryea,
Qloooester,
Anchors.
Springfield,
Gasolene laonch.
Essex Institote and Pea-
Salem, • •
Drawings of ships, photographs of
collections and naotical instrn-
body Academy of
Science.
ments.
John Meaney,
Boston, .
Race-boat eqoipment,
Steamer models.
Old Colony Steamboat
Co.
Henry G. Peabody,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Photographs of United States naval
sqoadron and yachts.
Charles N. Richardson, .
Oloooester,
Steerers.
Stewart & Binney, .
Boston, .
Sail-boat and steam-yacht models.
Dana Dodley,
Lynn,
Pneomatic dynamite gon.
DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND FISHERIES.
Oroup 37.
Board of Trade,
J. W. Marston & Co.,
John R. Neal & Co.,
Gloooester,
Boston,
Boston,
Fishes and ^ther forms of aqoatic
life illostrated by preserved speci-
mens, casts, drawings, etc
Casts of lobsters.
Cast of swordflsh, fhnen fish and
charts of fishing groonds.
WOBLD'S FAIB HAITAOBBS.
235
Oroup 88.
Nawx.
ADDRB88.
DE8CR2PTXOS.
American Net and Twine
Co.
Board of Trade, .
J. "W. Marston & Co., .
John B. Neai & Co., .
Boston, .
Oloaoester,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Nets, seines and materials, fish traps,
pounds, etc
Reports, statistics and literature
snowing progress of the Glouces-
ter flshenes, fishing gear, hooks,
Jigs and drails, nets, seines, rakes
and dredges, fish traps, weirs and
pounds, fishing stations and out-
fits, fish knives, gaffs, etc., illus-
trations of special fisheries, fishing
boats and vessels.
Lobster gear and traps, wharf, build-
ing and bars for lobster fishing,
lobster boat.
Models of schooners, dory, etc., gear
and lines, mackerel jigs, gill nets.
Cape Cod fish weirs, mackerel gatf
ana illustration of special fishenes.
Oroup 40.
Edward E. Bumham, .
Gloucester,
Canned mackerel.
Board of Trade, .
Gloucester,
Models and method of handling and
curing fish, cured and preserved
fish, products of fisheries, appli-
ances for preparing fish products
and models of fish markets,
wharves, etc.
Gloucester Isinglass and
Gloucester,
Fish glues, isinglass and fish glue
Glue Co.
articles.
J. W. Marston & Co., .
Boston, .
Models of building and appliances
for lobster indus^ and models of
lobster market.
EzraKelley, .
New Bedford, .
Blackfish oil for watches.
John R. Neal & Co., .
Boston, .
Models illustrating lobster industry,
appliances for fish market.
Wm. F. Nye,
New Bedford, .
Watch, clock and chronometer oil.
DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS.
Oroup 130.
Max Bachman,
Amy A. Bradley, •
Jane N. Hamond, .
H. R. Hvatt, .
Henry 'A. Kitson, •
Wm. 0. Partridge,
Katherine Frescott,
Theo. Alice Ruggles,
F. G. Wesselhoeft,
Anne Whitney,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Sculpture.
(I
236
KBPORT OF BOABD OF
Group 140.
Kaxx.
Address.
Thomas Allen,
Boston, •
Oil paintings.
Mary K. Baker, .
£. H. Barnard, .
Boston, .
Boston, •
Frank W. Benson,
Salem, •
Wallace Bryant, .
Boston, •
Caroline Banker, • • Boston, •
I. H. Caliga, .
Boston, .
W. W. ChurchiU, .
Boston, •
J. G. Cochrane,
Boston, •
Lucy S. Conant, •
Boston, •
Mrs. C. A. Cranch,
Boston, •
Walter L. Bean, .
Boston, •
Joseph De Camp, •
Boston, .
Arthor W. Dow. .
D. Jerome Elwell, .
Ipswich, •
Boston, .
John J. Enneking,
Boston, .
Lncia Fairchild, •
Boston, .
I. M. Gangengigl, .
Boston, •
Abbott Orayes,
Boston, •
Lillian Oreene,
Boston, •
Joseph H. Greenwood, .
Worcester,
Ellen Day Hale. .
Maria Halloweli, .
Boston, .
WestMedford,
E. W.D.Hamilton, .
Boston, •
J. H. Hatfield,
Canton, •
Belle D. Hodgkins,
Salem,
Edith M. Howes, .
Boston, .
Ernst Ipsen, .
Louis Kronberg, •
Boston, .
Boston, .
F. M. Iiamb, .
Houghton,
Northampton, .
Clara W. Lathrop, .
Laura Lee,
Boston, .
Waveriy,
M. L. Macomber, .
Ernest L. Major, •
Boston, •
Albert H. Mnnsell,
Boston, •
Edward GloyerNiles, .
Boston, •
Mary S. Norton, .
Boston, •
Wm. M. Paxton, .
Boston, •
S. B. de Peralta, .
Boston, •
Lilla C. Perry,
Charles F. Pierce. .
Ambrose J. Pritchard, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
•
Boston, .
F. H. Richardson,
Boston, .
Henry Orme Ryder,
Manchester, .
J. M. Stone, .
Boston, .
Edmund C. Tarbell,
Boston, •
Stacy Tolman,
Boston, .
F. H. Tompkins, •
Boston, •
Ross Turner, .
Salem, .
Frederick P. Vinton, .
Boston, .
Jacob Wagner,
Sarah W.Whitman, .
Boston, •
Boston, .
Charles Herbert Wood-
Boston, .
bury.
Group 141.
Thomas Allen,
Dwight Blaney,
Edward C. Cabot,
Painting in water colors.
((
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If
t(
J
WOBLD'S FAIB MAJtTAOBBS.
237
Oroup 141 — Ckmetuded.
Nawk.
Addbus.
DsacRnrriov.
Lacy S. Conant, .
Boston, .
Fainting in water colors.
EUen S. Dixey,
Hendricks A. Hallett, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Melbnme H. Hardwick,
Boston, .
Arthur Rotch,
Boston, .
M. Silsbee,
Boston, .
Joseph L. Smith, .
Boston, .
Alice Stackpole, .
Fanny W. Tewksbnry, .
Boss Tnmer, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Salem,
Oroup
148.
Bominer Lovewell,
Chelsea, .
Engravings, etchings, etc.
J. A. S. Monks,
Boston, .
8. A. Schoff, .
Greenfield,
Charles A. Walker,
Boston, .
W. P. Cleaves,
Springfield, .
W. B. Closson,
Lancaster,
William Jay Dana,
Brookline,
F. E. :^llebrown, .
Boston, .
Elbridge Kingsley,
H. F.W.Lyons, .
Hadley, .
Boston, .
Oroup 144.— Chalk, Cbarcoal, Paatel and Pen-and-ink Drawingrs.
Anna E. Klnmpke,
Boston, .
Drawings.
Adelaide Wadsworth, .
Boston, .
it
Jacob Warner,
Francis Gilbert Attwood,
Boston, .
{<
Boston, .
({
Frank 0. Small, .
Boston, .
((
DEPARTMENT OF HORTICULTURE.
Oroup 21.
Oirin C. Cook,
Milford, .
Hickory nuts.
Oroup 22.
Botanic Gardens, .
R. & J. Farqnhar,
H. H. Hunnewell, .
State of Massachusetts, .
Rea Bros.,
W. C. Strong & Co., .
Cambridge,
Boston, .
Wellesley,
Norwood,
Waban, .
Tropical palms.
Bedding plants.
Palms, etc.
Flowers and plants.
Plants.
Flowers.
Oroup 26.
Blak Mfg. Co.,
Springfield, . . Lawn mowers, sprinklers, etc.
238
BEPOBT OF BOARD OF
DEPARTMENT OF ETHNOLOGY AND ARCH/EOLOGY.
NikMR.
Addskss.
Feabody Muse am of
American ArchsBology
and Ethnology.
H. P. Bowditch, .
£. Hitchcock,
State Board of Health of
Massachnsetts.
M. Anna Wood. .
C. F. Hedge, Clark Uni-
versity.
Hugo Mastnrberg, Har-
vard University.
Esther 0. Pntman,
Milton Bradley Co.,
Cambridge,
Boston, .
Amherst, •
Wellesley,
Worcester,
Cambridge,
Cambridge,
Springfield, .
II 1 II III 1
II 1 II III 1
DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY.
State of Massachusetts,
Specimens of native woods.
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICITY,
Group 122.
Electrical Forging Co., .
General Electric Co.,
Monson Electric Weld-
ing Co.
Converters.
Magnets, indaction coils, conveitBrs
and transfoimerB.
Indaction coils and transformers.
Oroup 128.
General Electric Co.,
Instrnments of precision, volt meters,
ammeters, watt meters, etc
Group 125.
Elektron Mfg. Co.,
General Electric Co.,
Thomson Electric Weld-
ing Co.
Springfield,
Boston, .
Boston,
Direct-cnrrent dvnamos.
Direct-carrent dynamos, intermural
railroad, battle ship, altemating-
cnrrent dynamos.
Altemating-caiTent dynamos.
Group 126.
Electric Forging Co.,
Cables, wires, rheostats, switches,
insoiators, fnsible cat-oats and
safety switches.
WORLD'S FAIR MAKAOERS.
239
Oroup 126 ~ Concluded,
Name.
Addrus.
Dsscsipnoir.
Electrical Heat Alarm
Co.
Elektron Mfg. Co.,
General Electric Co., .
Stanley Electric Mfg.
Co.
Thomson Electric Weld-
ing Co.
Wasnbnm & Moen Mfg.
Co.
Boston, .
Springfield,
Boston, .
Pittsfleld,
Boston, .
Worcester,
Safety heat appliance.
Cables,wire8 and electrical appliances.
Rheostats, switches and meters, un-
derground conduits, safety appli-
ances, lightning arresters and cut-
offs.
Safety appliances.
Rheostats, switches and safety appli-
ances,
light, cables and vdres.
Oroup 127.
Colbum Electric Mfg.
Co.
Elektron Mfg. Co.,
Electrical Forging Co., .
General Electric Co.,
Stanley Electric Mfg.
Co.
Fitchbnrg,
Springfield,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Pittsfleld,
Electric motors.
Direct, constant-current and alternat-
ing-current motors.
Motor generator.
Direct, constant and alternating cur-
rent motors.
Motors.
Oroup 128.
Bemis Car Box Co.,
Elektron Mfg. Co.,
General Electric Co.,
Lawrence Machine Co.,
Robinson Electric Truck
and Supply Co.
Springfield,
Springfield,
Boston, .
Lawrence,
Boston, .
Street railway truck.
Electric elevators.
Motors for railway for ^neral appli-
cation and for novelties.
Centrifugal pump.
Street railway truck.
Oroup 120.
Colbum Electric Mfg.
Fitchburg,
Incandescent system.
Electrical Forging Co., .
Boston, .
lumps, fixtures and appliances for
arc and incandescent systems.
Elektron Mfg. Co.,
Springfield, .
Incandescent lighting and appli-
ances.
General Electric Co., .
Boston, •
Search-lights and arc system, lumi-
nous electncal fountains, and in-
candescent system.
Walworth Mfg. Co., .
Boston, .
Railway and arc-light poles.
Oroup 180.
American Electric Heat-
ing Co.
Electric Forging Co., .
Boston, •
Boston, •
Apparatus for warming and heating
by electricity, electric ovens and
furnaces.
Metal-heating generators and appa-
ratus.
240
BBPOBT OF BOARD OF
Group 131.
Namk.
Addrkss.
DxacBXPTxov.
•
Colbnm Electric Mf^.
Co.
Electrical Forging Co., .
General Electnc Co., .
Fitchbnrg,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Electrotyping, electro-plating, elec-
tro deposition of metals and electro-
lytic separation processes.
Electrolytic metal separation.
Magnetic separator for separating iron
ores.
Group 182.
Electrical Forging Co., •
Thomson Electric Weld-
ing Co.
Forgings, weldings and apparatus.
Forging and welding of metals.
Group 138.
Electric Heat Alarm Co.,
Electric Magneto Clock
Co.
General Electric Co., .
Thermostat.
Electric clocks.
Dynamos for qnadmplex telegraphic
service.
Group 184.
American Bell Telephone
Co.
Clare L. Sponholz,
Washbom & Moen Man-
ufacturing Co.
Boston, .
Lowell, •
Worcester,
Exhibit of history and development of
telephony.
Telephone register directories.
Telephone caoles and wires.
Group 185.
General Electric Co., .
Boston, .
Dental driU.
Group 13e.
Electric Gas Co.. .
Franklin Electric Appli-
ance Co.
Holtzer Cabot Electric
Co.
Ignition of explosives.
Iieat-regnlator appliances.
Electric antomatic burner.
Group 187.
General Electric Co., .
Thomson Electric Weld-
ing Co.
Historical models and works.
Objects illastrating electrical prog-
ress.
WORLD'S FAIR MANAGERS.
241
Group 138a.
Namk.
Addrkss.
Electric Forging? (^o.,
Gtencral Electric Co.,
Graton Sc Knight Mfg.
Co.
Jowett Supply Co.,
Walworth Mfg. Co.,
BoBton,
Dostoti,
Worcester,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Dkbcbii'tion.
. Construction tools and apparatus,
application of metals in electrical
construction.
Patent exhibits, apparatus for elec-
trical construction and repair, water
wheel coupled to dynamo, carlion
and its application, direct-coupled
engine dynamos.
Belting.
Automatic friction device for car
1)odies.
Railway and arc-light poles.
NOTB. — Aflthe Oeneral Blectric OompAny made iu cxhibiu through the New Vork
ofHcc, awards were granted to them an of that State. Their name therefore does nui
appear in the Hat of MaMachuoetts exhibitors who received that distinction.
DEPARTMENT OF LIBERAL Af^TS.
Group 147.
A. W. Cram, . . . Haverhill,
Massachusetts State
Board of Health.
. Cleaning out for drains.
Analytical work in food adulterations,
water, etc.
J. C. Ayer Co.,
Dolil)er-Goodale Co.,
Sherman R. Nye, .
Edward A. Tracy, .
Group 148.
Lowell, .
Boston, .
Chicopee Falls,
South Boston, .
Pharmaceutical preparations.
Food for infants.
Finger truss.
Surgical splints and jackets.
Group 149.
Amherst College, .
Clark University, .
Deaf School, .
Feeble-Minded School, .
Harvard University,
Massachnsetts Institute
of Technology, .
Massachusetts ]N' o r m a 1
Art School, .
Massachusetts State
Normal Schools.
Milton Bradley Co.,
Amherst, .
Worcester,
Northampton,
Barre,
Cambridge,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Springfield,
Photographs, plans, books, etc.
University work.
School work.
School work.
Charts, photographs, publications,
etc.
Books, theses, apparatus, shop-work,
etc.
Students* work.
Collective exhibit from Normal
Schools in Bridgewater, Framing-
ham, Salem, Westfield and Worces-
ter.
Kindergarten's manual training, sci-
entific and drawing materials.
242
BKPOBT OP BOARD OP
Group 149 — Concluded,
Nauk.
Addrkss.
Dkscriptiok.
Monnt Holyoke College,
South Hadley,
History , photographs, students'
work, etc.
Mnsenm of Fine Arts, .
Boston, .
Students* work.
Prang Educational Co.,
Boston, .
Models, text-books, drawing mate-
rials, etc.
Smith College,
Northampton, .
Pictures and pamphlets.
State of Massachusetts,
—
Educational exhibit.
Tufts College,
Somerville,
Photographs, charts, etc.
Wellesley College, .
Wellesley,
Photographs, charts, etc.
Williams College, .
Williamstown,
Photographs, books, instruments, etc.
School work.
Christian Brothers,
Chicopee, .
Christian Brothers,
Waltham,
School work.
Sisters of Providence, .
Chelsea, .
School work.
Sisters of Notre Dame, .
Canton, .
School work.
Sisters of Notre Dame, .
Maiden, .
School work.
Sisters of Notre Dame, .
Boston, .
School work.
G-roup 150.
Estes & Lauriat, .
Qinn & Co., .
D. C. Heath & Co.,
Houghton, Mifflin & Co.,
Interstate Publishing
Co.
Leach, Shewell & San-
bom.
O. & C. Merriam Co., .
New England Publish-
ing Co.
Park Commissioners, .
Alfred A. Post,
L. Prang & Co., .
Salem Press Publishing
and Printing Co.
Silver, Burdett & Co., .
Norman W. Heams,
G. H. Wilson,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
SpringfieUl,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Salem, • •
Boston, .
Middleborough,
Boston, .
Books.
School books.
School books, charts, maps, etc.
Books and magazines.
School books, charts, etc.
School books.
Webster's Dictionaries.
Teachers* books and periodicals.
Maps and photographs of park sys-
tem.
Volapuk literature.
Chromo-lithQgraphic art prints.
Books, charts, engravings.
School books, charts, m&ps, etc
Samoan manuscripts.
Musical publications.
Group 151.
Blair Camara Co., .
Boston Cash Register Co.,
Buff & Berger,
Button, . . Photographic apparatus.
Northampton, . Cash registers.
Boston, . . Surveyors'andengineersMnstmments.
Group 152.
Wm. E. Wall,
Somerville, . ' Graining
Group 153.
United States Mailing , Boston, .
Case Co.
Mailing case for liquids.
WOBLD'S FAIR MANAGBBS.
243
Group 164.
Naxk.
Address.
Descriptiok.
Lam son ponsolidated
Boston, .
Cash and parcel carriers, mailing
Store Service Co.
cases, etc.
Lamson Store Equip-
Boston, .
Registering measuring machines.
ment Co.
Standard Autograph
Boston, .
Time recorder.
Time Recorder.
Group 157.
American Peace Society,
•
Boston, .
Books, treatises, diagrams, etc.
Group 158.
Chickering & Sons,
Boston, .
Pianos.
Consolidated Manufact-
Boston, .
Hanos.
uring Co.
Oliver Ditson Co., .
Boston, .
Sheet music and music books.
Emerson Piano Co.,
Boston, .
Pianos.
Everett Piano Co.,
Boston, .
' Pianos.
Hallett 8c Davis Piano
Boston, .
, Pianos.
Manufacturing Co.
John C. Haynes & Co., .
Boston, .
Guitars, banjos, mandolins, zithers
and violins. >
Ivers & Pond Piano Co.,
Boston, .
Pianos.
Mason & Hamlin Organ
Boston, .
Pianos and organs.
and Piano Co.
Mason & Risch, .
Worcester,
Reed organs.
Henry F. Miller & Sons
Boston, .
Pianos.
Piano Co.
Phonoharp Company, .
Boston, .
Phonoharps and zithers.
Vose & Sons Piano Co.,
Boston, .
Pianos.
BUREAU OF CHARITIES AND CORRECTION.
Division A.
Boston Lunatic Hospital,
McLean Hospital, .
Boston, .
Somerville,
Architectural plans, photographs, lit-
erature.
Models, plans, photographs, statistics
and literature of hospital photo-
graphs, statistics and literature of
training school for nurses to the
insane.
Division B.
Boston City Hospital,
Seth P. H. Hale,
Boston,
Williamsville, .
Architectural plans, photographs, lit-
erature, statistics, models of appli-
ances of hospital and training school
for nurses.
Apparatus for moving invalids.
2U
REPORT OF BOARD OF
Division B — Concluded,
Name.
Addrkss.
Massachasetts E m e r -
gency and Hygiene
Association.
New England Hospital
for Women and Chil-
dren.
Sharon Sanitarium,
Boston,
Boston,
Sharon,
Dkscuptiox.
I
. , Maps, photographs, appliances, liter-
ature.
Photographs, plans, statistics, litera-
ture.
Plans and photographs.
Division C.
Aid for Destitute Mothers
and Infants.
Children's Aid Society; .
Hampden County Chil-
dren's AidAiJSociation.
Industrial School for
Girls.
Lyman School for Boys,
Massachusetts Infant
Asylum.
Massachusetts Society
for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children.
Massachusetts State
Board of Lunacy and
Charity.
Massachusetts State Pri-
mary School.
South End Industrial
School.
State Industrial School
for Girls.
Trustees of the State
Primary and Refonn
Schools of Massachu-
setts.
Boston, .
Boston, .
Springfield,
Boston, .
Westborough,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Palmer, .
Roxbury,
Lancaster,
Boston, .
Statistics and reports.
Photographs, statistics, library, etc.
Photographs, reports.
Reports.
Photographs and specimens of school
work.
Appliances, statistics and photo-
graphs.
Reports and record blanks.
Photographs, appliances and statis-
tics of Depiutment of Ont-door
Poor.
Photographs of buildings, statistics,
etc.
Photographs, descriptive charts and
specimens of school work.
Photographs, statistics, etc.
Bound reports.
Division D.
Associated Charities,
Associated Charities,
Associated Charities,
Boston Provident Asso-
ciation.
City Mission, .
Industrial Aid Societ}', .
Library Bureau, .
Department of In-duor
Poor.
State of Massachusetts, .
North End Mission,
Overseers of the Poor, .
Boston, .
Fall River.
Newtonville,
Boston, .
Lawrence,
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston, .
Boston,
Boston,
Literature and record blanks.
Literature.
Literature.
literature.
Literature.
I Literature and record blanks.
Card-case for records of charitable
societies.
Statistics and photographs.
Model of hospital pavilion of the State
Almshouse at Tewksbury.
Literature, photographs aiid statistics.
Literature, record blanks and statis-
tic-.
WOBLDS VAIB MANAOKR8.
245
DivlBlon D — Ooncbtdtd.
Namk.
AUDBKHJi.
Dksciui^tiox.
Overseers of the Poor, .
Overseers of the Poor, .
Overseers of the Poor, .
Society of St. Vincent de
Paal.
Union Relief Association,
Brookline,
Somerville,
Springfield,
Boston, .
Springfield,
Literatore, record blanks and statis-
tics.
Literature, record blanks and statis-
tics.
Literature, record blanks and statis-
tics.
Literature, record blanks and statis-
tics.
Literature, record blanks and statis-
tics.
Division B.
Massachusetts Reforma-
tory.
Reformatory Prison for
Women.
Concord, .
Framingbam,
Drawings, statistics, products and
literature.
Drawings, statistics, products and
literature.
Division F.
Home Savings Society, .
Massachusetts Board of
Charities and Correc-
tion.
Massachusetts Board of
Lunacy and Charity.
State of Massachusetts, .
Pioneer Co-operative
Bank.
Workingmen's Loan As-
sociation.
Statistics and record blanks.
2jcrap book.
Reports, photographs, forms, etc.
Maps, statistics and literature.
Literature and statistics.
Literature and statistics.
246 BfiPOBT OF WORLD'S FAIB MANA6KB8.
APPENDIX E.
FINANCIAL STATEMENT.
(I
it
(t
(«
«t
tt
it
tt
$46,550 41
8346 00
12,500 00
Appropriation by Legislature,
State building, cost of construction.
Office expenses. Board of Managers, .
Salary of Executive Commissioner, 2
years and 6 months at $5,000, .
Salary of Executive Commissioner, 8
months at $2,250, ....
Travelling expenses, . . . .
State building, cost of maintenance,
Entertainments, "Massachusetts day^^
and reception to Foreign, National
and State Commissioners, etc..
Cost of Agricultural Exhibit, .
Mineral Exhibit,
Board of Health Exhibit,
District Police Exhibit,
Charities and Correction Ex-
hibit,
Horticultui^l Exhibit,
Fine Arts Exhibit,
Historical Exhibit,
Educational Exhibit, .
Contribution to Rumford Kitchen,
Preparation of report {jlvl part).
Balance unused and turned back into State treasury.
$175,000 00
1,500 00
7.212 30
11,602 79
5,263 41
6,117 46
2,639 85 '
4,778 16
500 75
9,483 69
891 11
5,365 83-
1,052 59
11,491 47
224 85
448 80
l^fi IfiO \7
treasury, . $38,530 53
IfoTE. — To the above balance of $38,530.53 shoald be added the BQm. of
$1,263.80, the same having tjeen received by the Board of Managers from various
sources and by them covered into the State treasury. There thus remains an
available balance of $39,794.33 from which to pay the expense of printing and
binding the report of the Board of Managers, for which the Executive Council
has authorized an appropriation of $3,000.
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